I try to post something around the Fourth, to honor those who've served. Please let the length of this little tale be a testament to the respect that I have for all of you. This is a military Pilgrim's Progress, set in World War Two. It takes our hero on the fraught journey from youthful naΓ―vetΓ© to adult capability via virtues that everybody in the military understand, honor, courage, and commitment. The war crime at the center of this actually happened, even if the payback is in my imagination.
Finally, two of the main characters are from, "The Forests of the Night." That's over in Romance and most people haven't read it. I'm not suggesting you read it first. But you might enjoy it in retrospect. This is posted in LW for the obvious, and sadly far too frequent reason. I hope you enjoy - DT
DON'T SIT UNDER THE APPLE TREE
Wakey-wakey, today's the day you die.
The door of the Nissen hut banged open and a voice called, "Mission today." I slid gingerly out of my cot and scuttled over to stoke the remains of last night's fire. Once I got some heat going, I called across to my co-pilot Bobby, "Roll out, we're on."
Bobby's job was to rouse the rest, Eldon our, navigator and Whizzer Wiznooski our bombardier. The four of us lived in a gloomy, half-cylindrical corrugated-steel home, with two other 432nd crews. The 432nd was one of four B-26 Marauder squadrons that comprised the 17th Bombardment Group. We'd been based near Cagliari since the end of 1943.
There was very little talking as we pulled on long johns, wool shirt, trousers, and two pairs of socks, it's cold at 15,000 feet. My leather flight jacket had our squadron insignia on the front, a flying grim reaper, sickle in hand. On the back were two rows of ten bright yellow bombs and one of three, representing 23 combat missions, along with the name of our Marauder, "Beautiful Betty." As the pilot I had naming rights and I'd named mine after the love of my life, Betty Moran.
I had the usual pre-mission jitters. You have to believe that you'll get the job done and come home alive. But there were so many ways to die. It could be a blown tire on takeoff, or an engine failure, or a mistake in the clouds during assembly. We flew in tight defensive boxes.
Those were just the operational problems. There was always the flak. In my mind's eye. I could see the Marauder in front of me take a direct hit from an 88 and just disintegrate. The crew lived in our hut. I helped gather their personal effects for shipment back home.
Still, the B-26, could take care of itself. We had one fifty-caliber stinger in the nose. Whiz operated that. I had four forward firing fifties in blisters under the cockpit, and there were two tail mounted fifty-cals plus a dorsal turret with fifties. But the main advantage was the Marauder itself.
The B-26 was a medium bomber. Unlike the heavies, who carpet bombed from 25,000, we hit hard from treetop level, up to fifteen thousand feet. Legend had it that the Marauder was so accurate that she could deliver two tons of bombs into a pickle barrel.
The original version killed so many crews that she was nicknamed, "The Baltimore Bitch." The accident rate led to design changes that made the updated version one of the fastest and most reliable bombers in the whole Army Air Corps.
It was a little after 0500 and still pitch black when we jumped into a canvas-draped deuce-and-a-half and found places on its uncomfortable wooden benches. I was staring into space as we bumped along. I'd done that a lot recently.
When the truck stopped, Bobby nudged my shoulder and said gently, "Come on, Jed, let's eat." Eldon was the joker of the crew. He laughed and added in a sing-song voice, "Wake up, Jeddy, it's chow time."
All four of us slid out of the truck and strolled into the officers mess, which was alive with chatter from the other crews. The serving line was short, the fare was the same; scrambled "eggs" in a ghastly shade of yellow and a nice big slice of fried spam. Since it was a mission, we got all the coffee we could drink.
I swore I wouldn't do it. But I pulled out her letter and read it one more time.
*****
Like most small-town romances, I'd grown up with Betty Moran. We'd met when she transferred into my sixth-grade class. She lived behind me. So, we'd stroll home together after school. Betty loved baseball which was one of the many things I liked about her.
I was slow on the uptake when kids started coupling up. That was mainly due to the fact that my little friend had developed into such a pretty girl. She had one of those heart shaped Betty Boop faces, with huge blue eyes and cupid bow lips and dark hair in a bob. But it was her round butt, long legs and lithesome body that had all the fellows following her around like dogs.
Fortunately for me, Betty knew what she wanted, and she wanted me. She never wavered. Whether it was my animal magnetism, which I heartily doubted, or the deep sense of camaraderie that we'd built up as kids, I quickly fell in love with her.
Hence, we had one of those idyllic teenagerhoods. There wasn't a single day we were apart. We were in classes together, studied together and hung out at each other's houses. Some people might get bored with the same-old-same-old. But we thrived on it.
Still, a little rain has to fall into everybody's life. Our mutual problem was Duke Williams. Duke was the king of the smooth operators. He wasn't exactly good-looking. But he was big and brash, with the confidence born of being the son of a rich man.
Betty gave Duke a huge hard-on. So, Duke made it his personal crusade to take Betty away from me. He'd do all sorts of things, including showering her with attention and incessantly asking her out. She was always polite when she refused him. At least, when she was with me.
Duke also had a special "thing" for me. He might have been big and entitled. But he wasn't exactly gifted, and he was bone lazy. I was smart, and I worked hard. It wasn't just the teachers who noticed. So did Duke.
Of course, Duke's attentions to my girl pissed me off. But he was a big fat slippery weasel. He never did anything overt. So, I couldn't call him out without looking like a paranoid weenie. Most of the time I just heard mocking comments from him and his pack of ass-kissers. I ignored them. Because, my only goal was to get out of that town.