Notes from the author: Hi everyone! Ever since I wrote Life is a Runway - which had a WWII element in its plot - I have been itching to craft a WWII war bride story (with a happy ending, of course: I simply refuse to write anything that is not corny). This obviously implied some serious research on my part and major adjustments to the mores of my usual protagonists. Well... there you have it; I hope, as always, that you have a pleasant and exciting read. :)
P.S. This is a long story. In addition, I have tried hard to balance the war story with the romance and the sexual frolics; I apologize if there is too much of the former and not enough of the latter to your taste.
P.P.S. The squadron, the historical events and some of the characters are real; I have placed my story of fiction within this setting for reasons of verisimilitude, not to demean in any way the people (American, Australian, Japanese or Papuan) that took part in the New Guinea Campaign.
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"If I owned New Guinea and I owned hell, I would live in hell and rent out New Guinea."
- Bob Hartman, American GI
1.- A new Headhunter
"There you are, sergeant... 3-mile drome. You're sure you want to walk from here?"
"Sure! I have plenty of time before my appointment and I would like to get a feel for the place."
"Okee Dokee... good luck, then!"
"Thank you, corporal. Have a nice day."
USAAF flight technical sergeant Ezekiel Molina watched the US Army jeep drive away and was now standing, duffel bag in hand, before an aerodrome overlooking Joyce Bay, roughly 3 miles away from Port Moresby, Papua - hence the familiar name of Kila airfield. As he was already sweating profusely under this Papuan late-morning sun, he was almost regretting his decision to wander on foot; his native Hawaii had not prepared him for such an equatorial dampness.
From afar, the scenery was on par with all the idyllic cliches of a tropical haven. A full palette of multiple green hues completely covered the landscape and the outcrop of small hills delineating the northern extremity of the aerodrome perimeter. Despite the crushing humidity, the sky was barely shrouded by a few cumulus clouds and its blue was bright and immaculate, as if competing with the sea and its gentle surf for scenic bragging rights. There was no relief in the sea breeze, only a tangible transfer of heat. Regardless, Ezekiel cared little for climatology or tourism prospects; on this day, 20 June 1943, the island of New Guinea, which includes the Territory of Papua (a protectorate of the Commonwealth of Australia), was very much at war.
It was on this large island that the advance of the Army of Imperial Japan towards Australia had been recently checked, but by no means repelled yet; on a strange battleground where an illusory frontline was etched by the Owen Stanley Mountain Range, where land battles had been fought all along jungle tracks by ill-supplied - sometimes starving - combat units, where casualty figures were dwarfed by losses incurred by malnutrition or disease and over which the airspace was still bitterly contested by four different air forces: the USAAF and the RAAF for the Allies, the IJAAS and the IJNAS for Imperial Japan.
Walking inside the aerodrome and now taking in the scene with his technically trained eye, Ezekiel found that his new base of operations was a sobering sight. No control tower, no obvious taxiway to speak of, barely a runway in fact: he would soon fly out of a 5 000 ft. long gravel bed overlaid by a Marston Mat - an assembly of perforated steel planking. Adding to his sense of dread, the buildings he could see were all wooden constructions built on stilts that were more reminiscent of the Neolithic period than of the 20th century.
As he kept on walking and neared parked aircrafts inside their dispersal pads, however, his smile returned. Without requesting it, Ezekiel Molina was about to become a fighter pilot. He was lucky and he knew it, as pilots who qualify for multi-engine aircraft out of advanced flying school are usually assigned to bomber or transport squadrons; but not him, because of his exceptional vision and the marksmanship he had displayed at gunnery school. Ezekiel strolled along several P-40 Warhawks and then stopped in front of a fighter aircraft that took his breath away.
It was a P-38H Lightning, a peculiar and sublime design: basically two huge turbo-supercharged engines attached to a wing for the sole purpose of carrying into battle a nacelle that housed a single pilot and nose-mounted guns. This one in particular was currently being serviced by a team of armorers, carefully inserting .50-caliber ammunition belts for the four machine guns and 20mm shells for the cannon. The P-38 bore propeller spinners painted in lime green and identification bands of the same color on its twin empennage, thus it belonged to his unit: the 80th Fighter Squadron. In fact, when Ezekiel noticed the name Porky II painted on its nose, he realized he was gawking at the mount of his new commander.
Eventually, the staring newcomer was noticed. "Anything I can do for you, sir... huh, sorry... sarge?" The crew chief was in turn annoyed, commanding, confused and embarrassed at observing Ezekiel's flying wings first, followed by his enlisted rank.
Ezekiel was already used to this awkwardness around ground crew and pilots, so he did not react to it and kept on harboring a huge smile of admiration. "Ho! Sorry chief! I didn't mean to bother... I'm on my way to meet Captain Cragg and the squadron XO... I'm new here."
"Just keep going past these pens and you'll reach the main barracks and the offices. Since he's not flying, you'll find Porky in there."
"Thank you chief! See you later..." but there was no reply; the maintenance crew was fully focused on the P-38 again.
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"At ease... huh... are we going to spend the rest of the war with me calling you sergeant and you calling me sir?"
Ezekiel was obviously treating this as a trick question and his answer was fidgety. "Well, sir... huh... I mean, it's your call, really. The fact is that I am a flying sergeant and will likely remain one for the duration... after all, senior NCOs are supposed to be older than 20 years old, aren't they?"
"Yeaaa... I guess so. At least, I'm relieved to see that the rank issue doesn't seem to faze you... that's a distraction that I can do without, to be honest."
"Of course, sir."
"So... huh... accommodations OK?"
"I'm about to find out... the XO just gave me the official base welcome a couple of minutes ago."
"Well, keep an open mind; we're at war, after all... and the Papuans know how to build for their island. Those stilts will resist a typhoon storm surge and are high enough to ward off a great many critters."
"I will, sir." In truth, Ezekiel now had anxious visions of being choked in his sleep by large snakes or of being washed away by a rogue wave into the waiting mouths of sharks.
"Good... hmmm..." Captain Edward "Porky" Cragg was seemingly reading his personnel file for the first time. Ezekiel just stood there, waiting for some sort of paternal verdict.
"Ezekiel... God's strength, huh?" The captain looked at him in mock disbelief.
"VERY Catholic parents I'm afraid, sir..."
"Are they Spanish?"
"Actually, Puerto-Rican, sir."
"But you were born in Hawaii?"