Friday, July 6, 2012

The Halberstadt Two Seater.

     The early morning contact patrols had just gone out. The ‘Long Patrol’ was thundering off into the distance. Soon there would be nothing left to disturb the sunny silence but the returning birds or a buzzing fly awakening from a deep sleep.
     I wasn’t flying that day. Although I had a bit of an earache and a bad cold, the promise of spring was in the air. I had been on the squadron for about two months and already had a few missions, maybe a couple of dozen. Before this I was an observer, having transferred in from an infantry unit. After some of my experiences in the infantry, life on an RFC aerodrome; even over that harsh, cold winter, was quite civilized.
     And I was relaxed, confident, having been accepted into the company and camaraderie of the mess. Life felt good even though I couldn’t go with my mates on this mission. It wasn’t that I felt that bad, it’s just that at fifteen thousand feet or so, an earache can be a serious problem.
     From a previous bout of some kind of flux, I knew that only a few days off and you lose the keen edge, that fine focus that could make a lot of difference between death and survival. Still, a holiday once in a blue moon can’t hurt.
    So I’m standing there in front of the dispersal hut, and right next to it was the first of the row of empty hangars. The mechanics had gone for breakfast or back to bed, whichever suited the individual taste. It was peaceful, and a couple of hundred yards away, I could see the children of a nearby French peasant family going along past the end of our lane. There were a couple of hammocks slung under a clump of trees, and while the branches were not fully leaved-out, it would be a fine place for a nap.
     I guess the children were going to head off to school. Some of their friends came and off they went. Kids always make me smile, and this family had provided us with a lot of family atmosphere, and had sort of adopted us. Anyway, I heard a droning noise approach from the south, and while the engine had a familiar note, I couldn’t quite place it. Sometimes big shots and ‘Brass Hats’ who had access to personal planes or the power to requisition one would show up at the aerodrome on some trumped-up excuse or another. The major was leading this morning, on the weekly Long Patrol. This duty was rotated through the squadrons in this sector.
     I called in through the window of the ‘Recording Office & Command Post & Miscellaneous Shack;’ for that’s what it said on a crudely-carved plank nailed up over the door.
     “I wonder who the hell that is?”
     No sound came from inside; but maybe he had gone to the latrine or over to the cookhouse for a cup of coffee. The aircraft was very unusual; in that it appeared to have a glossy black fuselage and white wings, at least on the oblique angle I was seeing.
     Idly watching the unfamiliar shape enter a left-hand circuit at about seven-hundred-fifty feet, the south east orientation of the sun, and a bit of morning fog bank, turned it into a soft grey silhouette.
     The gentleman piloting the machine reduced throttle, lined her up into the western breeze, and dropped her down first time without a hitch, which is pretty good, for even the best sometimes have to pass over the field once or twice and study the situation before attempting it.
     The graceful shape taxied up and the engine sputtered to a stop. I straightened up, preparing to snap a bold salute, gaping in disbelief. Bulky in the highly-polished black cavalry boots, leather coat, blue breeches with a red stripe up the leg, massive gloves, holding a pen and clipboard, helmet, scarf, and goggles, this apparition pushed his green-tinted goggles up on his forehead, while I took the clipboard. He struggled out of his gloves and pulled some thick glasses from a deep pocket on his right breast. He put them on and blinked in the wan sunlight. Nothing out of the ordinary?
     He stood there as I studied the brilliant blue eyes twinkling at me in a kind of humourous bonhomie. Fortunately I happened to be wearing a pair of stout walking shoes as I had been preparing to go a-hunting for rabbits, pigeons or whatever I could hit. It would have been embarrassing to be wearing slippers and striped pajamas when a man like that arrived.
     The silly bugger had a basket of eggs and cheese; unbelievable! Hopping on one foot, I could barely contain myself. How long could it last?
     Unable to believe my great good fortune to have this gentleman all to myself for a few more minutes, I clicked my heels together as smartly as I could and gave a dashing salute.
     “Guten Morgen,” he told me affably.
     “Wilkommen,” I purred at the Unteroffizier, as he stretched a little in the morning breeze.
     “Kommen zie hier,” I said politely and courteously; turning and beckoning. “Ja, ja, ilkommen.”
     I opened up the door and held it open in polite fashion as he hesitated and then went into the dark interior. He stumbled in the darkness and I pulled up a chair for him. Then I made a show of dropping his clipboard on the CO’s desk. Loudly; enough for him to know what I was doing. I pretended to look for a pen.
     “Scheiss!” I murmured. “Dumbkopft.”
     I rummaged in a drawer.
     “Gott im Himmel…”  I grunted.
     “Wo ist…?” his mouth opened up but I was right on him, even as I pulled out another drawer and mucked about in the contents.
     “Berlin,” I sighed.
     Then I leaped up out of my seat behind the desk and scooted out the rear door while he took a load off of his feet. And my luck held, for right there; coming back with a tray and a steaming coffee pot and cups; was Mitch, the recording officer.
     “Give me that!” I whispered excitedly. “Sh-sh-sh!”
     I put the tray down on an old table beside the wall.
     “Come around and look at this.”
     And with my hand literally holding his face shut; I pushed, poked and prodded him into the alleyway between the office and hangar number one. I was a little rough with him, but it was well worth it. This was a once-in-a-lifetime chance.
     “What the…fuck?” he gasped. “No! You can’ be serious…”
     “Get a fucking guard on that. Tell him I’ll be taking off in a minute. Make sure they know me,” I told him. “Don’t think. Sorry sir. But, seriously, just do it? Please?”
     He had a silly grin on his face as he gazed deeply into my eyes in glee. He was wild-eyed, in fucking delight! These desk jockeys, they don’t get out much. The man looked at me, looked back at the plane. I could see his mind go.
     “This is too good a chance to miss…” he was thinking out loud and we had no time for that, in my humble opinion.
     “Carpe diem, Captain. Seize the day.”
     “I knew that would come back to haunt me,” he grumbled, still grinning though.
     There was a little bit too much white around the eyes, but he was coming around…
     “Come on captain,” I pleaded. “See if you can keep the boys quiet for about five or ten minutes.”    
     “You are one sick bastard,” he breathed in awe. “What the hell are you up to?”
     “Just play it by ear and let the ball roll, and the chips fall where they may,” I begged him.
     He smiled and nodded.
     “Some things are worth any risk…why, I believe it was you that told me that, once upon a time. I’m just taking the lessons you taught us and now I’m applying them.”
     He nodded again.
     “Damn it all, son-of-a-bitch,” was all he said.
     Then I nipped back to the tray, and went into the building, to see how far I could get with this little charade. The real trick was to keep from bursting out laughing, or being asked the wrong question.
     “Ah, cafĂ©? Camerade?” I beckoned to the German pilot, who had been frankly dozing in the warmth of the stove, which was still lit.
     “Ja, ja,” he grinned as I laid out all the stuff.
     He had a sleek, well-fed look about him, with thick but straight brown hair, very long, piled up on his head; combed around in a swirl.
     “Kraft durch freude!” He guffawed; ‘strength through joy.’
     It may have been some help in the current situation, but he seemed to be gazing at a photo torn from the ‘Zeitung’ or news; a paper confiscated from a prisoner. It was pinned up on the wall behind Mitch’s desk. The Intelligence boys provided us with it, just so we knew who and what we were dealing with, (sometimes.)
     A picture of an aristocratic face…it was the face of the Baron Manfred von Richtofen. He was wearing his most recent decoration.
     Still, I was convinced this man was as blind as anyone I’ve ever seen without an actual white cane.
     “Cigaretten?”
     “Nein, danke shoen,” he said, taking out a pouch and pipe.
     Excellent! It takes some men days to smoke a pipe. This one seemed in the mood to relax.
     Thank God; but he didn’t appear to be the overly-talkative type, and I needed every break I could get on this one. Mind you, it’s not like I couldn’t just shoot the silly bastard in the head, and have done with it. So I controlled the situation; so far…so good.
     “Das ist gut cafĂ©, ya? Gut Englander cafĂ©,” I told him with special emphasis.
     “Ja, das ist gut,” he agreed with me, looking down in approval at his chipped enamel mug.
     “Englander schwinehunde!” I yapped a time or two to make my point. “Arf! Arf!”
     And he smiled politely, and concentrated on puffing on that pipe. No doubt enjoying a brief respite from some paper-bound existence somewhere in a rear echelon. Yes, the gentleman was no doubt aware that some of the fly-boys were getting pretty slap-happy these days.
     “Englander schwinehunde,” he agreed.
     “God, I owe you one,” I prayed silently.
     That stove didn’t get put out for days at a time, in early spring we opened a window and put wood in the stove. I opened up the door and tossed in a stick or two, just to look busy, anything to stall for time.
     Smoke up the room…blind the bastard.
     “Ya, Ya,” he murmured, grateful for a chance to warm up after his long flight.
     I let him help himself to more cream and sugar, while I stood by the window, watching the boys outside falling all over themselves. Mitch, smart fellow, had divined the need to refuel the plane, and he had a couple of guys with rifles and bayonets guarding some kind of perimeter. I could just see them, if I stood on tiptoe and looked out on an oblique angle from the window.
     While admittedly a quiet kind of a morning, one never knew who might turn up.
     “Das ist gut, ya?” I asked him, as I thumped down in my chair and picked up the form.
     Quickly perusing its contents; I noted that we were being delivered a Halberstadt two-seater which the enemy used for reconnaissance and escort duties. It was a very nice plane, brand-spanking new. That must have been worth a few bucks.
     “Gut, gut,” he acknowledged as he noisily slurped his coffee off the top of the brim.
     A thick finger, with long black hair on each segment politely indicated where I was supposed to sign.
     “Hier, hier, und hier,” etc; but I held off for a moment.
     Near sighted. I bet he could see to thread a needle, and everything else was just a blur. I burped, farted, squirmed in my chair, hummed some nameless tune, making sure it was nothing he could have ever heard of; a little Cape Breton ditty I had heard on a train once.
     I went over to the back door and propped it open, with a big rock we kept beside it for that reason.
     The German pilot might see latrines out there, if he cared to wander, and I went out the front to have a quick look-see at my new acquisition, clipboard held proudly in hand. Off in the distance, I could hear the odd gasp and giggle, as I strutted around the two men checking over what was a very impressive and attractive machine.
     “Is she full?” I murmured to Gill, and he nodded in the affirmative, with a big smirk lighting up his normally dark, lantern-jawed features.
     “What do you think?” I asked the adjutant.
     Someone in a nearby hangar was banging on tin. Voices were kept very low.
     “I’ll go chat the lad up while you change into your flight suit,” he told me, Wiles and the other mechanic, it was Eldon Heath, chuckled in complete disbelief.
     I gave Mitch the clipboard and told him, ‘Someone will have to make a decision.”
     I can’t begin to describe the attitude of admiration they looked at me with, it was unbelievable.
     “Be ready to spin that prop,” I told Eldon, who was a bright fellow and could be relied on.
     “If he talks to you, just ignore it,” I told the men. “Just fire the fucking thing up, alright?”
     They nodded, and I buggered off at a fast trot, for this kind of prank can easily go wrong if you don’t keep aware of the time factor, and the element of chance gone awry. Despite the usual struggle, the flying suit went on in jig time, and as I approached the hut again, the two men came out the door in a brotherly fashion, as if they had known each other all their lives.
     The adjutant pointed at me, and said something to the effect, “Und Wilhelm….sprachen ‘Ich bein ein Berliner…ein Berliner!’”
     The ‘Fritzie’ had the paper, he was carefully putting it on his little clip board. Mitch could take responsibility for it. Let him sign for it.
     They both laughed. Fine, my name is Wilhelm, I’ll remember that, as I climbed up into the front seat of the Halberstadt. They were still talking, jabbering away in Jerry-talk and that was just fine with me because I was totally unfamiliar with this aircraft. I poked my hands around the cockpit, feeling the instrument panel and throttle setup. A process of osmosis, but then someone told me the Germans are a very methodical people. Where would everything be?
     “My name is Wilhelm and I am a doughnut? We’ll talk about this later, Mitch,” I whispered to his evident satisfaction.
     Suddenly the German pilot was standing there, pointing in at things and jabbering at me as I nodded vigorously. Then he pulled on his goggles, and began to climb into the rear cockpit.
     I waited until he has had time to buckle his strap up.
     The adjutant told me, “Nothing unusual. There’s the fuel cock, there’s the electrical, there’s the trim, there’s the compass, et cetera. It’s pretty simple; really.”
     The ‘Fritzie’ was all bundled up around the head and ears, and Mitch spoke in a low tone.     
     Men nearby were shouting and running around; all of them looking busy and efficient.
     “I’ll be back in half an hour,” I told him.
     The other man looked suddenly serious.
     “I’ll rustle up a discreet escort for you,” he said. “Be careful.”
     “And good luck,” he added. “Tee-hee-hee…”
     Poor guy could barely keep his composure. Hang on sir, hang on.
     “It’s been good so far,” I told him, just then some boy came running up from the area behind the hangers with a brown paper package tied in string.
     He ran up and quickly handed it in to the figure behind me. The perfect touch! A couple of bottles of the finest French brandy and some good English sausages. He turned and waved and took off from there at a brisk pace. Ah, yes, ever the efficient dishwasher, he didn’t look back or wave. A local civilian employee, the story would go around in a flash.
     The perfect final touch; and the kid handled it just right, probably earning himself a half crown for his trouble.
     “Did you throw in a box of condoms?” I asked Mitch, who blinked back tears, trying not to convulse in hysteria.
     I could see some kind of paroxysm quaking at him as he stumbled away through the cloud of dust and dirt thrown up by the propeller wash of another nearby plane, just pulled out of hangar number two. Men stood in front of the fuselage roundels looking at me and that poor Boche Unteroffizier. He waved at them, and a couple of them waved back.
     Mitch waved us on, lips smiling and voice unheard in the morning air. God, I love my job…sometimes.
     The German started talking, so the man at the front of the plane, Eldon, he flicked the prop over for me and the motor suddenly sputtered into life.
     I was on my own now, that’s for sure, but I felt supremely confident. I was young, and this was the lark of a lifetime. My companion, who must have been as blind as a bat and a very brave man, idly glanced around at things as I gingerly learned to taxi the big, splendid machine. A little logical reflection told me this situation was manageable, provided I didn’t try to hurry and get ahead of myself. As the plane wove right and left through the alley between the big trees, branches naked in the sunlight’s glare, the gauges showed that the water temperature was fine, the oil pressure was good, the revs were easy enough to read. When I poked, pulled, pried or prodded at the throttle…it had a kind of spring-loaded squeeze-catch on it, it moved and the revolutions increased accordingly. I waggled the ailerons, kicked the rudder, and looked back to see my elevators moving. Everything was right there, all self-explanatory. Everything seemed good.
     As we cruised past; first one hangar, and then another had tarpaulins over the doorways.
     The next two or three were clearly empty hangars, and there weren’t too many vehicles of any sort about. I was relieved not to see the big red ‘Bovril’ van parked there! That van, hastily impressed into service, might have been a dead giveaway.  
     Mitch had been very quick on the uptake. As I taxied down to the east end of our field, I saw out of my peripheral vision that Bob Riley and Steve Gilmore were preparing to follow me.
     Basically the plan was to fly straight, level and very, very low over our lines, and then climb like crazy over no-man’s land so the German gunners could see the distinctive wings and shape of the aircraft. Not much of a plan; but not having time to co-ordinate with the other lads; there wasn’t much else to do. It was a very chancy proposition, yet I just felt lucky. Ever had one of them days? Good day to buy a ticket on the football pools.
     “No sense in hanging about,” I told the sky and the birds, of which I could see a few. 
     I sat on the end of the runway briefly, running up the engine and checking the magnetos. I turned to look at him. We both nodded and so then I boosted the power. We rolled along and began to pick up speed.  The rudder was effective at about fifty kilometres per hour, as I deduced the metric system from the dashboard. The elevators were mushy but the rear of the plane came up smoothly at about sixty-five kilometres per hour, and at about ninety the right wing began to feel light and I had to put in right rudder to counteract some moderate torque. I wondered if he knew how to use the rear machine-gun, or if we would end up having to evade Allied fighters.
But with his eyes, it would be useless anyway. I would just have to maneuver as if I didn’t have a rear gunner, and just use the front gun. That’s really all I was thinking just then.
     She lifted off smoothly, all on her own at about ninety miles per hour. I figured that out later. It sure was a beauty of an aeroplane, let me tell you! Keeping it low and fast…I headed straight on.
     There was a slight cross wind from the right, and I turned into it; clearing the trees at the end of our field. As I continued to climb, I continued to turn, for after all this gentleman was an enemy soldier and we wouldn’t want even his dim eyes to observe too much of this area. Also, I didn’t want to miss seeing any other aircraft in the vicinity.
     If I saw them first, I could steer to avoid friend and foe.
     Today there were no friendlies. Heading east; I dove down to about fifty feet as I went over our own lines, grateful to see a couple of familiar shadow shapes passing along left and right beside me. Gilmore popped off a couple of rounds which went into the dirt ahead of my plane and in the tiny mirror the German bobbed his head around at the sight of the two scouts.
     Poor old fucker is shitting his pants now, isn’t he? Good old Gilly. God I miss that man. We had a few good times together, in Paris, in London, and a few other places.
                                    *                                  *                                   *
     Another burst or two and my friends pulled off and up, away into the sun. I kept on towards the Boche lines, flying low over the shell-cratered land. A clump of barbed wire looms up, pull up a little, zoom along the contours of the valley.
     Rushing up a riddled hillside, with the lone, stark skeleton of a tree with two and only two branches. At the base of the tree, I saw a clump of huddled bodies, waiting to be picked up in the night.
     Here we go. Enemy trenches look different from our own, don’t ask me why. Somehow more evil, darker, more sinister. There is no friendly welcome down there for the wayward lad, the lonely flier. Just people with guns who want to kill young Englishmen. Or anyone they can get.
     A few shots came, quickly silenced by alert German NCO’s. Then we were through. And now I even knew where we are going. It had to be the place. Anyhow, it’s a German two-seater squadron, and it’s a pretty lonely place, and that’s where I plan to set him down. I know it’s there, we raided them the other day. And I know this country like the back of my hand.
     And at that, I began to claw for altitude.
     No one around here knows who I am.
     It’s an odd thing, but when you go on a patrol with the express purpose of shooting at enemy aircraft, you often see hardly a thing. It’s difficult to approach them. They’re quite shy.
     Today they’re everywhere. It’s actually quite enjoyable to wave at them; to stare back at them, and all the time, thinking, ‘if only you knew…’
     You stinking bastards, if I pull this one off, it will be ‘A severe blow to enemy morale…’
     I giggled at the thought. Who really cares? Not me. This one has a personal feel to it.
     Leveling out at about six thousand feet, (two thousand metres by the dial,) I was thinking ahead. Shaking the stick to and fro and kicking the elevators to warn him, I put the plane into a ninety-degree vertical bank on its left side, and held it there as we lost five hundred feet.
     “Hang on to your sausage, old man,” I screamed in sheer delight.
     Then I pulled back on the stick and with a good amount of elevator, did a full three-sixty degree turn without losing altitude. This required a certain amount of high side rudder, but the aircraft handled smoothly and predictably. It was quite impressive, and I had a new perspective on just why this aircraft was so often hard to shoot down, being strongly built and having adequate power for it’s size and mission.
     Leveling out, I throttled back and pulled up the nose gently to about ten degrees above the horizon, and felt the fish-tugging-on-the-line feeling of an incipient stall.
    She stalled very nicely, neither going left nor right, and the nose dropped and that was about it. I made a mental note that she stalled about eighty-five or ninety kilometres per hour with large elevator deflections…mind you, it was all in metric. I headed east again.
     It’s nice to know these things, when you’ve never landed a particular machine before.
     I did a big, beautiful loop, after diving a little into it, seeing the speedometer hit about two-hundred twenty kilometres per hour. I eased back on the stick and up we went, until we were hanging in our straps. The whole world hung upside down over our heads and I could feel the blood rush up but it wasn’t unpleasant. As we plunged vertically, I let back a little on the throttle and concentrated on clearing my ears and ever so smoothly adjusting the flight path with touches of rudder.
     I don’t mean to brag, but I feel like an ‘artiste’ sometimes, especially when we shook for a brief second and I knew we have hit our slipstream perfectly. It ends quickly. I flew inverted for some time, then rolled out yet again, pulled up into a vertical climb and rammed full throttle and aileron to the left. The aircraft seemed to pause, hang there, in a cloud of blue exhaust, then we did a slick little tail slide back down again, turning anti-clockwise.
     Pulling back on the stick, I caused her to nose forwards again, and we continued on our journey. I heard noise. Looking back, he waved at me in glee. I guess it must have been quite a thrill. Sure hope its worth it…at least he wasn’t angry.
     I wouldn’t want to get a reprimand. As my eyes scanned the area where I expected the enemy aerodrome to be, a very loud droning rang in my head and I wondered just what the problem was? But according to the instruments, it wasn’t the engine. I was fifteen miles behind enemy lines…and there they were, the whole goddamned Richtofen Circus!
     Oh, my God! They were coming up from behind, stacked up in three layers of about six or seven planes each. A section of five planes surrounded us; and damned if the two nearest ones, one on each side, weren’t upside down. As they went by, the man on the right did an anticlockwise eight-point roll, and the man on my left did one in the opposite direction.
     “Udlinger!” I bellowed at the top of my lungs, that’s Ernst Udet for fucking certain. “Buddy!”
     Recognizable? Hell, with blue wings and silver fuselage, with pink polka dots, you would think so.
     And there’s fucking Smiltz, and von Fluebl, and whole bunch of fuckers whom I plan on shooting down later.        
     And they were close – maybe ten feet outboard of my wingtips.
     One of them even waved at me, and I didn’t have time to see if the other one did, but I bet he did too! That was a hell of a lot of enemy aircraft to see up see close and personal.
     “I’m glad they’re on our side,” I bellowed, turning back to look at my passenger.
     A big silly grin, firmly affixed upon my face.
     Taktakatakakkta!
     Holy shit, what now? Two Nieuport 11’s flashed past and one had a red patch on the fuselage.
It’s Gilly! They somehow managed to stick with me. And now the freaking Richtofen’s bastards are on my friends’ asses, as the two friendly machines climbed like the bandits they are, up into the sunny bowl of the sky. One Hun began to smoke.
     I saw that they made it to the first cloud even as several machines broke off the pursuit and made to the south, no doubt planning an ambush tactic. The Flying Circus disappeared as I lined up on my runway. With a bit of luck, I might still pull this one off.
    As soon as my wheels touched down, on the edge of their field, I hooked in the rudder and caused her to ground loop. What do I care if I damaged the wing tip? It’s not my plane.
     I pointed up at the sky yelling incoherently, and bobbed around in my seat, as if I were undoing my straps in a great panic to get out.
     “Ausfahrt! Schnell! Schnell!” I yelled at him, frustrated because he seemed to be moving at a snail’s pace.
     The gentleman knew what a strafing was; and so he wasted no time in abandoning our cozy little ship. I saw him scurry for cover nearer to the hedgerow as my engine idled. He remembered his package, I could see it clutched under his left arm. Good man. Wouldn’t want to forget the brandy, you’re going to need it.
     That pesky droning came again. As I pulled my neck around to sweep the sky and the nearby airspace, my two pals shot past the aerodrome boundary and began to shoot up the hangars about a quarter of a mile to the west.
     Takatakaktakatak!
     The distinctive noise rolled back to me as I could see scurrying figures running for cover.
     Now was as good a time as any! I throttled up and took off straight at the hangars, probably causing even more panic and confusion. Engine caterwauling like a banshee, I yanked her up a couple of hundred feet and made off as quickly as I could.
     At least two columns of smoke rose up near the hangars and workshops, and I could see one machine burning and another that didn’t look too healthy, but I had no time for detailed observations.
     The return trip should have been uneventful. But I suppose I’d been lucky enough for one day. It doesn’t pay to expect too much sometimes, but my luck held a little longer. And that’s all that’s really important, isn’t it? Just hold out long enough; as I scanned the sky all around.
     Give her full throttle and hope she doesn’t break. Hell; all I needed was twenty minutes.
     So anyway, I was cruising along about eight hundred feet; heading into the usual western wind, which thankfully was light today. A couple of black puffs ahead alerted me to the presence of an enemy balloon, and yes, Holy Shit!
     Here were Gilly and his wingman attacking it.
     They broke off and headed straight towards me, then turned in behind me, as I plowed on, straight ahead. Two-seater pilots often dove into their own barrage to throw off pursuit. I pulled at what was obviously the cocking lever, and it wouldn’t move, then I saw the little catch, on the side of the breech. Now she’s cocked. I lined up my sights as we sailed serenely towards the enemy balloon, as Gilly and pal took pot shots, firing short little bursts at me, narrowly sending them past my wings and tail. I dove even lower, giving the impression of sheer desperation, a friendly aircraft seeking the protection of the guns…
     The enemy gunners have bought into the fraud completely. But Gilly and the other one were too close behind me! The enemy machine gunners were in a quandary as to what to do now. 
     They hesitated for vital seconds. Arguably, they should have risked shooting down a friendly aircraft.
     Two for one, right? The inexorable logic of war.
     “Fuck you too!” I was mad as hell for no reason at all.
     And then I let rip with the old Spandau, and the balloon seemed to crumple up and float to the ground. It was too low, too sudden for the observer to jump. Since it didn’t burn, it’s possible he didn’t die. Later the boys told me they didn’t see anyone jump either, but were pretty sure they’d seen someone in it when they attacked, so it is hard to say. But the enemy ‘sausage’ was definitely destroyed.
     At that, the usual response was for every gun to open up, and that’s what they did. We were lucky to have confused them and we got into no-man’s land with very little damage. Riley had a few holes in the main-planes, and Gilly had three holes in the fuselage about halfway to the tail empennage. My earache was completely gone, although I did kind of feel in the mood for a nap, as I switched off the engine. They never did shoot at me, or if they did, they didn’t hit anything.
     Probably thought it was an honest mistake.
     Mitch stood here looking at me.
     “Well. I’ll be damned."
     Won’t we all, Mitch. Won’t we all.

Sunday, June 10, 2012

Excerpt: Maintenon and the Art of Murder. WIP.

The Pont Marie, circa 1903/04


“Hey, Andre.” Levasseur nodded at the floater. “Anything special?”
“Nah.” Sergeant Levain shrugged. “Just another poor and anonymous soul who couldn’t take it anymore.”
A small group of onlookers on the street above stood in contrast to the pedestrians with umbrellas and faces to the wind, refusing to even acknowledge their presence as they scurried past to their workplace. A line of buildings, windows impenetrable due to glare and grime, ignored the disruption and reflected and amplified shouts, bicycle bells and car horns. A few bleary-eyed faces could be seen in a brightly-lit café on the far side of the street as they read the morning papers and sipped scalding coffees.
It was another morning in Paris and life had its logic and a certain pace of its own in spite of all distractions.
He shivered involuntarily. The slanting grey rain hissed down, making puddles jump and splatter with its violence. The Seine, serene in its relentless push to the sea, made its own contribution to the wetness of the sounds all around them as it lapped at the shoreline and gurgled past a few small rocks at the edge. His shoes squelched as he shifted from side to side on the narrow shore.
This sort of weather always made his back ache. The dead man bobbed face down in one of the recurrent eddies along this stretch of the river. They stood looking on as one of the attendants reached with a borrowed boathook and dragged it in a little closer. The junior looked reluctant to grab it, but waded out into the shallows when it hung up on a snag. They were all soaked anyway, even the boys in blue with their glistening slickers, always dripping down the necks in his recollection. Even so, he wished he had one now.
Grabbing the corpse by the collar, the attendant dragged the thing up as high as it could go. Heavy and limp, probably weighing fifty or a hundred kilos more due to the passage of time and resultant soakage, he was going to need help.
This one didn’t look likely to come apart at the seams, and that was always a blessing. Andre pulled the sodden fedora up a little from his forehead, where it chafed from sheer weight and a long night.
“So where’s Gilles?” Hubert Levasseur and Maintenon went back a long time.
They were both in uniform together. It was hard to visualize either one of them as a young man of twenty. Levasseur was tolerable, unlike some others, and treated Andre with familiarity. It was a kind of professional friendship. You would never know, with Levasseur, whether he liked you or not. He gave no one any cause for complaint, whether they were a colleague or a customer. His partner, whom Andre didn’t know, stood gazing silently at the far side of the river, appearing oblivious to his surroundings.
“The dentist.” Levasseur gave a nod of sympathy.
“Yes, it would take a lot to keep him away.”
“Hah!” Andre grinned. “What are the odds this bugger is going to have a wallet?’
“Slim to none.” Levasseur was probably right. “What are you doing here?”
“Swapped shifts with Couteau. His sister’s getting married.” Levasseur nodded.
“Just your luck.”
“I’ll be home in a couple of hours.” Andre was philosophic, and he might need a favour someday.
“Something’s got him real good!” The fellow, Jaques, wrestled with the weight.
It was probably a dead tree trunk, whole and entire, with one stout branch sticking out just so.
Whether it was suicide, accident or murder, these folks never seemed to make it easy for the police. Genial cursing came from the senior ambulance attendant as he waded into the chill green water. His arms held high, he sighed deeply when his crotch submerged. With a hold under the armpits, one on each side, they dragged the decedent in and unceremoniously flopped him down beside the stretcher. They looked down at themselves, and Andre saw the younger one’s knees knocking from the cold. Excess water flowed out from their shoes. Their lips moved, but they had some sense of propriety, mostly for the sake of the audience. They kept it quiet as they got a proper grip on ankles and shoulders. An officer moved in to assist Hubert at the heavy end.
“Ready?” The younger fellow nodded, giving a flick of the head and a brief grin. “Heave, ho.”
“Up we go.” They put it down again at the base of the concrete seawall.
Andre Levain nodded grimly at the macabre cheerfulness of the meat-wagon boys. When they got home from work, no one ever asked how their day had been. They probably had an answer, though. It’s just that no one ever asked.
“He’ll be along shortly.”
Levasseur waited for them to carry it up the embankment, an affair replete with more carefully-studied cursing, not so good-naturedly now, for the mud and the filth on their obligatory hard leather shoes was as slippery as hot oil on marbles. An officer up above had a rope tied to the guard rails, and even that didn’t help much, but Andre was used to such things.
After he and Levasseur made it up, they tied the rope onto the top of the stretcher for additional pull from above.
With pushing and shoving from a pair of uniformed officers below, braced by whatever footholds and cracks in the concrete that they could find, the heavily-strapped corpse was soon at street level.
“Let’s have a quick look, then.” Levasseur studied the face and then shrugged. “Have you ever noticed they always lay them face-up?”
Andre rewarded Levasseur with an appreciative grunt.
“Oh, look, it’s my uncle Raoul.” Levasseur’s tone was priceless, and one of the gendarmes, face haggard in the early light, laughed out loud.
The onlookers muttered softly in the background, as Andre smiled for the first time since coming on shift at eleven thirty last night.
Hubert, having borne the brunt of unpleasantness this morning, squatted by the body and began checking the pockets for personal articles.
“He’s got a watch.” Hubert checked more pockets, pulling out coins and some small bills from the gentleman’s right front trousers pocket.
He pulled a small silvered flask from inside of the jacket breast pocket.
“That’s a nice coat.”
One of the attendants looked sideways at the senior police officers.
“Good shoes.”
“Thank you, Jaques.” Levasseur pulled one off and took a serious look at it.
“Well, it’s not a robbery, anyway.” Levain pulled out his notebook. “No wallet yet?”
“No. Gin.” Jaques’ nose was legendary, although he could be a pest at times.
Levasseur put the booze aside with the watch and the money. The man had no rings, but the cufflinks looked nice, perhaps even expensive.
“Huh.” Andre was unmoved.
“Yes, thank you, Jacques. Francois.” Levasseur’s eyebrows rose at the thought of the heap of missing persons reports, a heap replenished every single morning, in every town of any size or significance across the entire country. “Oh, boy.”
The boys put him in the back of their little van, bickering back and forth about who was wetter and more miserable. The voices of the crowd, and the people themselves, faded away. There was nothing more to see.
The hiss of the rain and the pushing of the wind through the sycamore branches, barely showing the first hint of green buds breaking open, lifted his hair and warmed his neck as a thin shaft of April sunshine cut across the city from the east.
***
'Quai Montebello before the storm.'

The resources available to writers today are wonderful. The photos are presented for scholarly and critical purposes.

As the reader can see from the top photo, I have links to other pictures which show an actual earthen riverbank, with rocks, maybe some snags, and a mucky edge, which might have been found approximately in the correct time period, and the actual location isn't mentioned in this short scene.

When writing a first draft, the important thing is to build a logical plot structure. Descriptive detail can be lavished in later, what I want is to complete the plot, invent all the characters, lay out a nice balance between action, dialogue, characterization, action and repose.

It is really only later that I worry about what the city actually looked like on that rainy morning, or what a certain Levasseur might have looked like. yet even now, some aspects of his character come through, including a sense of humour. I'm not trying to consciously leave things out at this stage. The big goal is to advance the story. Holes in logic, even miss-naming a character, can be fixed later. (I have been known to call comeone Bert in one chapter and then forget the name, and call him Fred. This can be confusing to fix.)

Thursday, May 31, 2012

Lonely.



































(Photo: Morguefile.)

Sometimes I come here because I am lonely.
There are living, breathing, thoughtful people here.
They are your friends if you want them to be.
Manchmal komme ich hier weil ich einsam bin.
Gibt es Leben, atmen, nachdenklichen Menschen hier.
Sie sind deine Freunde, wenn Sie sie sein wĂĽnschen.
It's better than wandering in the desert.

Es ist besser als in der WĂĽste Wandern.

Here is my book of poems: (Hier ist mein poesie-buch.)

Saturday, May 26, 2012

Art for art's sake.




































As a boy, I wanted to be a great painter.

Even now canvases like Monet’s “Water Lilies,” impress my soul although there’s not much clarity. I can even paint – I have sketches like old naval victories, paintings in the style of Picasso or Cezanne,  Thompson, although Rembrandt’s detailed soul-analysis is a stretch. It’s not even that hard. Not really.

Where is the market? I mean, why bother?

Art teachers, jealous as they were, always assumed I was some kind of expert, a “ringer” who just showed up to show off and make fun of the untalented but sincere persons who take lessons and pay the bills.

They were right. Like the guy who can really play the drums, but makes a living selling shoes – not enough courage to get out there in the trenches, or get one’s head stomped in by critics and fans alike. I figure in order to succeed, i.e. make money, one would have to grab the world’s attention and hold it long enough for someone important to decide you are “in fashion” as a painter. That you are “marketable,” and “collectible” and “in vogue.” Like as in “Good Investment.” Maybe I was just too lazy to do it—to put
the time into learning the craft.

Hey! If I was to get some frames, and stretch huge expanses of white cotton over them. Rent the Public Library and Art Gallery – how much could it cost? Bolt or screw them up on the walls, put paint in pots on tables, or on the floor in buckets. O.K. I know what you’re thinking. “It’s already been done! Lots of artists have public participation in their painting projects, and the Old Masters had half of their work done by
apprentices…and so called installation art consisting of neat rows of bricks, toilet seats, or even buckets of paint on a table is old hat.”

Yeah, you’re right. But then…you always are. (I’ve never heard you ask a question, or even express an opinion. You know everything.) It is abstract, and expressionistic, and therefore derivative. It’s even nihilistic, and therefore anti-Canadian.

The very first guy that walks in there and says, “Bleep! Any bleep-bleep could do that!” I’m going to grab him by the scruff of the neck, dip his head in the paint pot and bounce the mouthy bleep off the bleeping walls for a while.

It may not be entirely original. One heck of a piece of performance art, eh?

“I couldn’t do it without your help.” Eventually we’ll get this work of art finished.

I may even be able to sell a couple of them. But that’s not really important right now. 

Try to think of it as “art for art’s sake,” and you have to admit; the medium of performance art has really been lacking in some essential quality lately. You know – like violence? Think of it as a great naval victory without the water; ships and smoke and stuff.
                                                    
From quiet contemplation comes chaos.


Monday, May 21, 2012

Henri Farman Shorthorn.

        Henri Farman 'Shorthorn.' Wiki Commons.


     A group of us stood watching on the badly cracked paving outside the hangar. A lad by the name of Harry volunteered to be first. He was pretty insistent.

     He had a strong desire to prove he could fly. That’s what the rest of us took it to be.

    We muttered and chuckled amongst ourselves, something ‘Mr. Muggs,’ our instructor, had learned to tolerate well before we ever showed up.

     Muggsy learned to talk a little louder, and that was about it. There were two or three Canucks there, knuckleheads all of us.

     I would say we all thought we could fly, although a quite a few of the boys did show some signs of a very rational nervousness. The instructors gave all of us about two or three hours of time in a dual-seat Farman. These planes, the ones the instructors used, had slightly more powerful motors; and they were a lot newer to boot.

     When the instructor took off, we sat and watched how they moved their hands and feet as the plane responded. It wasn’t exactly dual control. I’ve written about that in my story, ‘Death Amongst the Clouds,’ which appeared in the School Chum’s Review, April ’24, I think.

    Harry was quickly strapped in. I still wonder ir he was all hung over, and if that had anything to do with it. There was some nervous chatter as we all impatiently waited for our turn. Soon the motor was running loudly in our ears, and the blast from its prop put up a lot of dirt and crud in the air. It stung the eyes. You could feel the grit hitting your face, and it was necessary to blink and turn your head.

    Our classmate Harry put on the gas and she moved away. He was blasting it as hard as it would go. This was a tired old machine, and the supposedly seventy horsepower motor was marking time as it built the revs. Harry trundled along, and you could see the wing-tips going up and down in some syncopated beat,a tin-pan-alley kind of beat.

     Finally the plane staggered into the air. I checked my watch again out of habit. The man had taken so long to get going, he was waiting so long to pull up. He took off at ten fifty-three a.m.

     We watched the back end of Harry’s plane. It bobbled in left and right bank some, and with the wings waggling, he beat through the turbulence over the long line of trees at the aerodrome’s verge.

     “Hold her, laddy…” breathed the instructor.

     “How high is he, sir?” someone asked.

     “Shush, boys!” he mouthed in frustration.

     “Looks like about one-fifty,” I murmured to tow-headed little Dicky.

     Dick Littlehampton, nice fellow from Exeter. He was nineteen, I was seventeen and a half, but had lied about my height. Hah! That’s a joke. Yet I stood as nervous as anyone else as we watched Harry diminish in size over the south. Then he tried to turn. He almost made it.

     He must have been about a hundred eighty feet.

     “NO-o-o-oh!” ground out the instructor. “Shit!”

     Harry had turned left, and was diving into the turn. He was ninety degrees through the urn and coming back around. The top of the wings and tail were about all of the plane that was visible, as the booms are just a spindly framework, although it was said the twin-boom design was stiffer than some other aeroplanes.

     Some cursed and some held their breath. I strained with all my might to pick out the tone of Harry’s engine, not so easy with all the other things going on at our busy field.

     The tail wind. The tail wind was such that the plane had dropped out of its flying speed range…

      Harry smashed into the tree line after disappearing in a heart-thudding beat of time. A frozen mental image that will stick with me forever. Harry crashed at about ten fifty-four and thirty seconds a.m.
    
     We stood quiet as the instructor slumped his shoulders and wouldn’t look at us for some long moments. We could hear a siren’s wail and the sound of engines and voices calling from three quarters of a mile off, but the voices carried on the wind.

     “Cor!” someone began.

     “Shut the fuck up!” barked Muggsy.

     Ashen-faced, we stared at the trees. Then we broke and ran for it, without a thought or word or a command. I guess all the wild horses in the world couldn’t have stopped us, although there probably wasn’t much a gaggle of untrained boys could do to help old Harry.

     Smudges of black smoke streamed up and over the windbreak of tall spruces or firs or something. There was a farm over there. We used to go over to the fence and talk to the horses sometimes; at least I did.

     “Get your asses back here!” bellowed Muggs, and while it took a while to sink in for a couple of the lads, we finally slid to a halt in confusion.

     Muggsy was muttering and cursing something outrageous, and we double-timed it back to the concrete apron in front of the hangar.

     “All right, who’s next then?” our mentor asked in resolute resignation.

     He looked at the list on the clipboard in his hand.

     “Alexander,” he called, and a quiet, shy lad of unbelievably rakish slenderness stepped forward. He snapped off a quick salute and pathetically stood to attention, and it looked as if his knees were about to give out on him. He’s ready to shit his pants.

     “What did he do wrong, Alexander?” sighed the instructor. “And relax, would you?”

     “He turned too soon,” said the boy. “Not enough height.”

     “Do you think you can do any better?” asked the instructor.

     He didn’t want to send anyone that’s not ready. Or didn’t he care anymore? He seemed kind of burnt out to me, but then I’d seen it before.

     The rest of us paid rapt attention to every word, every comment, every inflection, every nuance. We moved along the line to another machine that the mechanics were busy preparing.

     Alexander took a hell of a long time to fasten up his flying suit. To get the gloves, and the fastenings just right. The poor guy was borderline hyperventilating.

     “Next one better get ready,” suggested the instructor.

     Alfred, a thick-set kid from some little village in the Midlands started, flushed, and looked guilty. A lot of eager beavers here today.

     Finally Alexander was in the hot seat. The prop was flipped over and it was time for his initiation.

      As we watched it warm up for a while, it was a strangely subdued bunch of lads. We know this had to be done, and that it would be our turn soon. Yet we felt curiously detached from Alexander.

     It’s like watching a lab rat, the pounding of the heart a kind of guilty pleasure, bearing in mind poor old Harry. Every so often we would glance over there, and while Muggs tried to ignore it, there wasn’t much he could do either, since he couldn’t help taking a glance himself from time to time as Alexander mucked about.

     Then his engine suddenly revved up and he was going across the grassy aerodrome.

     The plane pulled up to ten feet, and dove down five, then back up to about fifteen or twenty. The engine burbled along, and I thought he was smart to pick up as much speed as he could. I was going to remember that.

     He was approaching the tree line, and just when we expected him to pull up and out, the engine note died down suddenly and he flopped the plane down and it went sliding towards the trees.

     What did he do? Did he shut the throttle off in sheer panic? I couldn’t believe it, and I still don’t know even now. Yet that must be what he did…that engine was running fine.

    There was a crunching sound, and there was the impression of a big heavy object, dark and limp, flung out of the machine as it hit.

    “Fuck,” said our instructor.

    It’s difficult to say if Alexander throttled back in panic, or if the motor just coughed at a bad time.

    “All right, who’s next?” came the question as we moved along to the next Henri Farman.

     This was one of our reserve machines, a spare we kept around in case a plane broke down and was taken out of service. Soon another lad strapped in and with heavily-beating hearts we watched his takeoff.

     This time the man got it right. He made the turn from an altitude of at least five hundred feet, although we held our breaths when he lost a good two hundred or two-fifty in the turn. His plane roared overhead as he passed down the runway at about three hundred feet.

     “Yay!” some guys yelled.

     “Shut up!” bellowed the instructor, but they couldn’t restrain themselves.

     “Shut the hell up!” he barked in anger.

     Finally the noise faded into sullen silence, a silence which became suddenly ominous with the realization…

     The lad did not return. He’d gone behind us somewhere, muffled or blocked by the hangars lined up in a row. He must have made the second turn, right?

     But we never saw him again. The next two guys seemed to do better, and made a successful takeoff and circuit. They both made a successful landing. Then it was lunch.

     After lunch, it was a couple of more boys, with one more crash. Ben, who was maybe twenty-two, walked or rather hobbled away, looking surprising chipper about it all.

     “It’s the hospital for you,” said Muggs, and Ben climbed aboard his bicycle and painfully wove his way off in that direction.

     Then it was my turn. All eyes were one, a bit of a clichĂ© but the most pleasant feeling.

     At that point I didn’t really care what they thought. The trouble was that I knew what they were thinking and I didn’t like it one bit. For whatever reason I looked up from the crib notes in my hand, and gave the boys a theatrical grin and a big thumbs-up. Them guys laughed when I made them notes, but Muggsy never said boo…

     “Buggah me dingo!” I said, and they cracked up, only Muggsy glaring at me like he loved me and I was his only son.

     “Smarten up, Paul,” he said in a surprising gentle tone.

     That one hurt, for some reason.

     “Yes, sir,” I replied.

     Well. I must say; it was quite educational. Watching all them other guys, man, if I have to fly a dozen miles, I don’t plan on doing that. My guts flipped over a few times when he pointed at me, but then the calm came. I noticed a new sticker on the side of the engine casing, and it somehow reassured me. A little.   

     When you stand beside a plane, you can hear certain things in the engine noise, when you sit right in it, it’s pretty loud and anonymous.

     Tweaking the throttle a few times, I waved the men away from the front of the wings.

     As she idled, I pulled my mask down and gave our instructor, Mr. Alan Muggeridge, lately of a small town in the west, a serious sort of a nod.

     “Relax, you’ll live longer,” I told him in a shout.

     He didn’t smile, just nodded back.

     “Make us proud, boy,” he mouthed.

     I could barely hear him.

                                     *                                 *                                  *

     I checked the windsock, advanced the throttle gently, firmly and in a linear fashion.

     Not jerky. Feel the power and watch the little clumps of grass begin to pass by under me.

     At some point the breeze begins to tug at your clothing. Watch the speedometer.

     Hmn. I should have asked the mechanics if it was a good one. No time for thinking, things are beginning to happen. She felt light, and I wanted to hold her down till she read forty-seven on the dial, if not even a little more. But she was definitely up now.

     The wings rocked but it’s insignificant. I don’t even try to steady it, for the plane has dipped first one way then the other. But it almost corrects itself. The plane is a smooth four feet up from the grass, and so I took it back another notch on the elevator. Smoothly, yet pretty slowly she picks up more altitude. At this point I was looking at treetops about one hundred yards away, and realized the thing has made it up to about twenty five or thirty feet. I risked taking a look down and over the side.

    It was deceptive. I certainly wouldn’t like to fall from even this low height. It was also clear that I would in fact clear the trees. The speed picked up a smidgeon, and the trees passed below. The thing bucked a little. My heart skips, but no problem.

     I already knew there’s bumpy air here. That’s all the talk these days, ‘bumpy air.’

    The altimeter wasn’t even registering, so I just held the throttle tight against the stops and waited some more. The speedometer registered an even forty-eight, so I relaxed, and let just a tiny little bit of elevator out of it.

    The engine roared serenely. Sitting there, I risked a backwards glance. I wonder if them other guys felt this sense of triumph. The altimeter showed about two hundred feet, and so for a moment I studied some houses below. What an odd perspective. And how small they get so quickly. The buildings seem flat from above, a two-dimensional world.

     The plane achieved an altitude of about three hundred feet. The village was coming up. Without even really thinking about it, just a touch on the rudder pedals. Zoom directly down the full length of the High Street, past the church steeple. I wished I had more throttle, it would be nice to make more noise if possible. It was possible to see a number of people coming out of doorways as I flew by and looking up at me. Children in a laneway, under a line of trees, waved and shouted. I could see them jumping up off the grass as if to reach out and touch me.

     Glance at the clock, forty-nine knots, four hundred feet, three-fifteen p.m. The village was about two miles down the road from the gate. We walked it once or twice.

     “Focus, Tucker!”

     Yes! I felt like God up there. I knew I could do this, everyone else showed what not to do. The plane seemed strong, and the Henri Farmans weren’t known for their neck-snapping acceleration. The key thing is not to panic. To stay ahead of the plane. To anticipate that it stalls if you go too slow, or turn too tightly.

    The altimeter said six hundred, better keep an eye on that thing. Yet I had a full tank of fuel. I knew exactly where I was. There was a girl’s school up there somewhere, where the little stream went under the trees and entered the forest.

    The wind tugged and tugged at my clothes, and seemed like sandpaper on the exposed parts of my face. Half the noise came from the engine, and the other half seemed to be pure wind noise. It was a bad idea to open your mouth, it was a surprise to learn how hard it was to close it again…always the taste of castor oil, in them old planes. I have to admit I laughed when I saw all the flyboys with their white scarves, big long things hanging around their necks. I thought it was an affectation.

    It had to be experienced to be believed or even understood. It’s not like one or two of them didn’t explain it to us…but maybe we really weren’t listening. We were so young.

    The girls were out playing field hockey and I wished I could tip my hat to them, but it was too tightly strapped on. I waved and a couple of girls waved back, and I could see the matron sternly stride forward with her mouth opening up. Nothing wrong with my eyes.

    I’ve been up for what seems like ten minutes. Yet I doubt the instructor will give me heck if I bring it back in one piece.

    A gentle turn, wide, maybe a quarter of a mile wide, as I centred up on the road that led to camp. Soon the guardhouse and the gate were in view. On my left the aerodrome proper, with it’s long line of hangars, and a small and intense group of individuals standing in front of a row of aircraft just like this one.

     I gave the rudders a kick and waggled at them briefly. Hope they saw me.

     I put down and then up into it; and bucked like a steer being roped or a horse being broken. I put in left rudder and did a circle over the field, and came out of it again right over the guard houses. To be honest, I was delaying my landing for some reason.

     I just didn’t want to come down. And then to have to stand there, and watch the others fly. One at a time, will he live or will he die? Very depressing, very hard on the back and legs. Your feet just ached sometimes.

    Finally it was time to reduce the throttle. With a thrill I recognized that she responded like any other machine. She does what should be expected. She began to gently and slowly descend, and I stared at the throttle lever, trying to memorize just where it should be set.

     Might need that information tomorrow. And ‘we’ touched down about seventy yards from the class watching on the concrete. I throttled way back, there was no sense in crashing into them or the hangars. I brought her gingerly to a stop, only ten yards from where it had started.

     And that was my first flight in a Farman Shorthorn. Ultimately it turned out to be a very dangerous plane, for our side, anyway. I think the Germans should have pitched in and bought us a lot more of those trainers. They might have won the war.

     The first Canadian Division loaded up thirty thousand men and sailed across the Atlantic. Due to training accidents and a lot of sickness, we suffered ten percent casualties, more than ten percent, before we even got to France.

     The Allied flying services took about fourteen thousand casualties during the war.

     They say about eight thousand of those casualties were in training. I’m just glad I wasn’t one of them. Judging by what I saw during my own very brief little training course, the figures are accurate enough. And that was in the early part of 1916, when the war had already been going on for quite some time.


Author's Note: This was originally a part of 'Heaven Is Too Far Away,' but was cut from the book due to length considerations.