Several streams feed into this. Let me explain.
First, a reader asked me to give Marigold Wilson her own story. She has appeared in three of my other stories. But I have never written one especially for her. She is the reason why I ultimately chose to put this in LW - instead of the Romance category where it probably belongs.
Also - For some insane reason β lack of originality no doubt - I have been updating the Hemingway canon. The only remaining novel is, "For Whom the Bell Tolls." But that piece presents a number of problems to a modern writer.
First and foremost, For Whom the Bell Tolls is set in the Spanish Civil war. And that tactical environment is hard to duplicate.
Then β there is the problem of convincing the reader that the hero could meet and fall in love with Ingrid Bergman in four days while living in a cave? Seriously!!?? Even back then that required considerable suspension of disbelief...
Finally, on a totally unrelated note. I have read a couple of well-written stories that purport to be about the intelligence business. I actually work in that field. And like the lawyers who cringe at narratives written by non-lawyers, I wanted to write something that was closer to the world that I know - where bureaucrats and nerds outnumber the actual agents about 10 to 1.
People who didn't sleep through American Lit will recognize that Hemingway's tale ends at the epilog. If you like your stories dark and disaffected, then please stop reading there. Me? - I'm a hopeless romantic and indisputably NOT Hemingway. So I gave Jordan and Marigold their happy ending. I'm interested which one you preferred.
Oh!! And by the way!! The Tybee Island bomb is real - and it is still out there β so sleep well. DT
Overture
The Colonel was tired. He didn't mind training flights. But this one was a simulated combat mission. And those were a lot more stressful.
He and his other two crewmates had flown their B-47E 600 miles from Homestead Air Force Base on a course to mimic a low altitude run into the Soviet Union over the Barents Sea. The mission had been successful as 02:00 approached.
The Colonel's Stratojet was carrying a single transportation configured Mk15 Mod 0 hydrogen bomb capable of 3.8 Megatons. It was dangerous to fly an armed weapon over the continental United States. But the men of the Strategic Air Command had to train with transportation configured bombs to get the "feel" for the real doomsday situation.
The bomb was twelve feet long and weighed 7,600 pounds. That was close to the Stratojet's maximum lift capacity of 10,000 pounds. The bomb itself contained 400 pounds of conventional high explosives and it had a highly enriched uranium core with a plutonium trigger.
Upon detonation, the heat it would generate would turn five square miles of landscape into spun glass. And the shock wave would flatten anything within a twenty mile radius.
The Colonel was one of the Air Force's best, an Instructor Pilot. He had flown so many combat missions over Korea in A-26 Invaders that he couldn't count them. But the Stratojet was a totally different bird entirely.
His B-47 was powered by six General Electric J-47 turbojets. That brought its top speed to almost supersonic. The only problem was that the thin wings, which gave the Stratojet its high-speed aerodynamic advantages, also made it a bitch to land.
But at this point landing was the least of the Colonel's worries. His main concern was staying awake.
For the millionth time he looked outside the bubble canopy and February's night sky was lit up with stars. It was unearthly beautiful even though the instrument reading indicated that it was minus 70 degrees outside.
His copilot/flight engineer was behind him in the sleek bomber's narrow cockpit. He was going through the standard checklist for arming the device. He was just not actually flipping the switches to do it.
The Colonel was thinking about the Valentine's Day surprise that he had planned for his wife.
The 14th was only a little over a week away. And the Colonel planned to hop on the overnight boat to Havana. Where he was going to spend a romantic weekend drinking, and dancing with the woman he had loved since the third grade.
He was just glancing over his right shoulder, when a black apparition slammed into the Stratojet's starboard wing. The impact threw the bomber into a steep right bank and all hell broke loose in the cockpit.
The navigator/bombardier, who was enclosed in the nose of the aircraft, screeched over the intercom, "WHAT THE FUCK WAS THAT!!??"
The Colonel, who at that point was dealing with a severely damaged aircraft could only shout, "I HAVE NO FUCKING IDEA."
The co-pilot/flight engineer behind him said in strained tones, "It was an F-86. It slammed into the wing, bounced off and exploded. I think that whoever was driving it ejected!!"
The Colonel wrestled with the aircraft for an excruciating few minutes before he got it back to level flight. Then he and the co-pilot/flight engineer began to assess the damage.
The Stratojet was a tough bird and it was continuing to fly. But all of the avionics in the starboard wing were off-line and the number four and five inboard engines were about to fall off their pylon.
The Colonel squawked a Mayday to Hunter AFB. The fact that the Colonel's aircraft was carrying a potential "broken arrow" got the phone lines open all the way up to Omaha and General Lemay himself.
The Colonel told the boss that there was no way he could land the aircraft without jettisoning the bomb.
Normal landings require the B-47 to come in "hot". So at the best of times there was no room for error. With two of its engines shut down and God-knows-what damage to the flaps, they were likely to either overshoot, or hit the front of the runway.
If that happened, the bomb would fly out of the front of the aircraft like a spit ball out of a straw. And Savannah might experience its own version of nuclear holocaust.
So the people in charge were faced with two very unpalatable options.
If they ordered the Colonel to land without dropping the bomb and the plane crashed it would kill the crew and in the process might create an atomic disaster.
If they ordered the four ton weight of the bomb to be jettisoned they would have a classic Broken Arrow scenario.
There was considerable discussion up the chain of command but even the remote possibility of a hydrogen bomb going off in downtown Savannah made the ultimate decision. The Colonel was given orders to drop the device offshore.
The Stratojet circled out over Tybee Island and the bomb was jettisoned at 7,000 feet into Wassaw Sound.
There was no explosion so it was assumed that the bomb had just splashed into the shallow water of the sound. The Colonel then landed the Stratojet at Hunter and he and his wife celebrated a romantic Valentine's Day 1958, in Havana.
~
The phone blasted Jordan awake. It was 3 AM. He felt around on the night table and mumbled, "What".
A parade of brontosauruses was marching through his head and his mouth tasted like they'd left their droppings.
It had been another drunken night in DC.
Jordan had never been a drinker - until recently. But the crushing sense of alienation and world-weariness that had come over him since leaving the Army was killing him.