You'll note I have taken the unusual steps for one of my stories to disable comments and scoring.
The original piece contains a partial German dialogue, which I felt was important in the spirt of why it has been written. Even if you have no plans to read the other version, I'd appreciate if you took the time to read the pre-amble there.
If you do wish to comment or score, go find the other version as it's part of the
Heroism - the Oggbashan Memorial Event
This work has been edited by
29wordsforsnow
.
Thank you, this wouldn't have happened without you. Any cock-ups are my bits of tampering just before posting!
This work is solely published on Literotica courtesy of Inkent. Please let me know if it surfaces elsewhere.
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The original story has a fair amount of German dialogue. In this version, it has been removed and substituted by English text in blue. Hopefully that makes it through to be published!
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Shaken By The Hand of God
I peeled around to look at the train. Steam chuffed steadily in rapid bursts from the stack. There would be no doubt they were pushing the locomotive hard. They'd have caught sight of death flying above them, seeking them out like a hawk seeks prey as it soars overhead. Keeping some distance, I looked down, they were box cars, no signs it was conveying the poor wretches of the human race that were shifting to get away from the tide of war as it continued to wash over Europe.
God, I hated it. I hated this war. I just wanted it to be over, I wanted to go back to being a decent human being.
Tracer bullets flew by me as the single anti-aircraft gun tried to zone in on me, I was moving too quickly for them to really have anything other than a lucky strike. Banking back around in a circle, I was now convinced it was carrying materials to try and keep the Nazi war machine afloat. My plan was to attack midway down the train, come in fairly low before releasing the rockets. Picking the spot, I put the Hawker Typhoon into a shallow dive, making minor adjustments to my trajectory as I came in to make sure the train was exactly where I wanted it to be.
The anti-aircraft gun opened up, I didn't want to hang about. Sending the rockets on their way, I throttled up, bringing the stick back and over so I banked steeply towards the front of the train. All of a sudden, there was a monumental explosion below me, whatever was on the train went up in spectacular fashion, catching me unawares. Just as I came back almost horizontal, it happened. It felt like the hand of God reached out from the sky and grabbed the Typhoon, as if he momentarily held it still and shook it in anger.
The reality was something big had been blown upwards, striking the underside of the Typhoon causing the plane's engine to seize instantly. Oil and smoke streamed from the engine, the airframe juddering as I started to go down. I realised I now had an awful pain in my right leg too. It was too low to jump and I doubt I would be able to move myself out of the cockpit quickly enough. I'd seen fairly flat farmland on the other side of the railway line and a wooded area. I just prayed I could clear the woods before coming down.
I barely had control as I hit the ground, the plane bounced roughly over the field then the front lurched up at an angle. Shit! I just remembered, there was a waterway there too! The plane suddenly came to a violent halt at a crazy angle. The nose was in the water which was up to the canopy outer edge, water now streaming in filling the cockpit as the plane started to slide deeper into the water. The crash had knocked me out briefly, but the icy cold water shocked my system. I needed to act fast, I needed to get out of the cockpit, but found I was stuck. The sharp pain was still in my leg as I tried to move, it must have been broken either by whatever hit the plane or during the crash landing. I started to panic as the water reached my neck.
As my head disappeared under the water I began thrashing around. Then, out of nowhere, there was a hand on my chest, they were trying to stop me flailing around. I'd held my breath but was going to run out of oxygen fast. In desperation I pushed my head up towards the surface, I needed to breathe, so I tried. As I swallowed water, I knew I was destined to drown in a German river during 1945.
Panic took over, thoughts became a fleeting stream of memories as if my subconscious mind tried to ease the pain of what was about to come:
The End.
All the sounds of thinning breath dearly held onto, hushed more with every second running through the hourglass of my life. How could I voice my very last prayer if opening my lips would only cause death to come quicker to lead me away.
Suddenly, I was free. Somebody was frantically pulling at me to get me out. Clambering from the cockpit into the water, the smell of oil and water filled my nostrils, the flicker of flames coming from the fuselage behind me. Whoever had pulled me out dragged me into the bitterly cold water.
Immediately, it felt as if the dead weight of my wet flying suit would take me to an early grave on the river bed. I struggled to free myself of it, as my rescuer tried to assist me from sinking into the depths of the water. They then pulled me with them, pushing off towards the opposite side of the river.
They clung to me, supporting me as we headed for the other side. As we swam, I found the adrenaline had numbed the pain in my leg, the cold water quickly chilling me down to the bone.
As we reached the other side, flames engulfed what was not under water. The oil and fuel pumping into the river, the slick sheen moving silently across the surface of the water like a deadly crocodile. It quickly caught fire, burning steadily as it spread out from the wreckage towards us.
Resting in the reeds as we momentarily stopped to catch our breath, I turned to look back as flames which now engulfed the Typhoon in its funeral pyre. I turned to look at my rescuer. I thought it was a teenage boy that had rescued me. Instead, I realised it was a young woman, her blonde hair must have been tied up and now stuck to her back and face.
"Hurry up, hurry up"!
I didn't understand her, but the urgency with which she was tugging on my arm told me we needed to hurry and get up and away. As quickly as we were able, we slithered and crawled up the bank. I started to try and drag myself up. Then she realised my leg was injured and pulled me as hard as she could, until we were onto the level ground of the adjoining field. The pain was indescribable as I tried to move on my leg. She hooked my arm over her shoulder, I limped with her support towards a pony and cart sat close-by. We were both shivering, still soaked with the cold water and now in the chilly April air.
Helping me in the back of the cart, she hastily pulled straw over me. I could see her looking around, her face etched with fear and worry. I heard her move and take the reins, in less than a minute the pony began to trudge away. I had no idea where we were going or what she was going to do with me.
As I lay there whilst the cart bumped along the track, I wondered what she was going to do. Did she see me as a '
terror flyer
'; a name dreamed up as part of Joseph Goebbels' propaganda, that encouraged the German people to take reprisals against downed Allied airmen. Stories were rife of downed airmen being beaten to death or suffering at the hands of a lynch mob.
A few minutes later, the cart stopped. She uncovered the hay and beckoned me down, again she scanned our surroundings. We were at a small farm, there was a farmhouse and several outbuildings.
She helped me into the kitchen and I did my best to sit on a chair. Helping to undress me, the pain was unbearable as she removed my boot and trousers from my broken leg. She gathered up my garments and put them into a basket, out of view as we sat resting.
Suddenly, the sound of a motorcycle engine filled the air, and it was coming our way. With eyes wide, she pushed me towards the stairs, helping me climb them, then took me into a bedroom. There was a large closet. She bundled me into it, pushing me back as far as possible then pulled as many of the clothes around me as she could. As she closed the door, she was already pulling her top and skirt off, kicking them out of view under the bed. I caught a brief glance at her as the closet door shut. She had a shapely body below the simple work garment she had been wearing.
The doors to the closet had slatted doors. With no clear view, I could only see directly outside of the doors at a low level. The motorcycle pulled up outside. A moment later, an authoritative voice called out.
"Mrs Meyer, show yourself!"
I could hear her moving around, the sound of water being poured from a jug into a bowl.
"Mrs Meyer, show yourself, now!"
This time the voice sounded more urgent. It sounded like she had opened a window.
"Hello Fritz, please give me one moment, I have just washed myself after cleaning the pig stye!"
I recognised the name Fritz but didn't understand anything else. She spoke again, this time with some urgency in her voice.
"Fritz, please wait, do not enter my house, let me put some clothes on and I will come down!"
There was the sound of heavy boots on the stairs. I held my service revolver, I had doubts I wouldn't survive, but I'd sure as hell go down fighting.