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This Fog of Peace (Moon Brothers WWII Adventure Series Book 4)

Page 33

by William Peter Grasso


  The days were turning cooler in late September, but the pilots at Eschborn, with nowhere to fly and nothing but time on their hands, refused to abandon their daily baseball game. Tommy was playing second base as the opposing team’s best batter, a line drive hitting left hander, stepped up to the plate. The first two pitches were low; the batter didn’t bother swinging.

  But as the pitcher went into his windup for the third pitch, Tommy noticed something strangely different among the crowd of GI spectators near home plate. A plaid skirt danced in the breeze. Long dark hair framed a welcoming face.

  She was smiling at him. Beaming, actually.

  Sylvie…

  The bat made a solid CRACK as it struck the ball, rocketing a low line drive at the distracted Tommy. He didn’t see it coming until it bounced right in front of him…

  And then it went straight through his spread legs into right field. He’d never laid his glove on it.

  And he didn’t care.

  With the runner safe at first and his teammates screaming curses at him, Tommy trotted off the field yelling, “Sub!” He tossed the glove to a spectator who took over at second base.

  He grabbed her in his arms as they dissolved into a long kiss. Then he asked, “Where the hell have you been, Syl?”

  “France,” she replied.

  “Oh, I know that. Maybe I should rephrase the question: what the hell were you doing there? Please tell me you weren’t on another mission.”

  “No, I wasn’t on any mission,” she replied. “But do I have to explain it here on this baseball field? It’s not very private. Everybody’s watching us.”

  They walked hand in hand to a bench beside the operations shack. They could be alone there.

  “Okay, let me have it,” he said.

  “I had to perform one last wifely duty, I’m afraid,” she began.

  “You mean your annulment finally came through?”

  “No. It was more final than that. I had to bury Bernard.”

  Tommy was too stunned to reply.

  “He was driving a French Army truck near Heidelberg,” she continued. “There was an accident. The truck overturned. They say he was dead before reaching the hospital.”

  “Damn, Syl…I’m so sorry.”

  “Don’t be. But I never realized how complicated it is to be a widow. There are so many forms…”

  “Forms? For what?”

  “His military pension, for one. But it’s such a paltry amount, hardly worth all that paperwork. I never realized, though, that he owned three houses in Alençon—the one we lived in plus two others. I thought they all belonged to his parents. Can you imagine the bastard never letting me know that?”

  “From what you told me about him, Syl…yeah, I can imagine that. So now you own all that stuff?”

  “Not exactly. In France, it seems the spouse must get in line behind half the deceased’s blood relatives before collecting her inheritance. To be honest, I don’t want any of it. But I’ll wait for the notaire to do his work. It’ll take quite a while…nothing ever happens quickly in France.”

  “But you’re back now…for good?”

  “Well, I do have a job here with you Americans. Much is going to happen with that job very soon, too. The OSS…it’s changing its name. We’re about to become the CIA. But you can’t tell anyone I told you this.”

  “Yeah, I know the drill…super secret, loose lips sink ships, all that stuff. But CIA…what does that stand for, Syl?”

  “Central Intelligence Agency.”

  The name made him wince. “I don’t know…still sounds like spy stuff to me.”

  “That’s because it is spy stuff, Tommy.”

  “And you’re still going to be doing it, dammit.”

  She smiled serenely and took his hand in both of hers. “What I’m about to tell you is secret, too,” she said. “I’ll be going to Washington, D.C., in the not-too-distant future. But not until everything cools down in Berlin and some semblance of order there returns.”

  He began to ask why she’d be going. But then he realized she wouldn’t tell him, anyway.

  She asked, “By the way, did you fly in that aerial grand tour?”

  He didn’t have to answer. His triumphant smile told her he had.

  “That must have been a very interesting day, Tommy. A magnificent bluff.”

  She quickly changed the subject. “Is your brother okay?”

  “Yeah, Sean’s fine. I was with him about a week ago.”

  She pressed closer. “You know, when I go to Washington, maybe you could arrange to go back to the States, too?”

  The smile lit up his face again. That sounded like the best offer he’d had in a long time.

  *****

  Author’s Note

  EPILOGUE

  Let’s return to actual history for a final moment. In December 1945, two events occurred which the readers of this piece of alternative history might find interesting and relevant.

  In that month, General George Patton, still in Germany as 15th Army commander, was involved in a traffic accident. His staff car collided with a US Army deuce-and-a-half which had swerved into its path. The driver and another officer in the staff car were able to brace for the impact and emerged without serious injury. Patton, sitting in the back seat, failed to see the impending collision and was thrown forward against a metal partition. He sustained severe head and neck injuries which left him paralyzed from the neck down. Twelve days later, he died from a pulmonary embolism at a US Army hospital in Heidelberg, Germany.

  Many 3rd Army troops still loyal to Patton suspected that the death of their controversial former commander was actually the result of an assassination by either the American government or the Soviets. Though the collision was declared an accident by the American authorities, it was necessary to spirit the driver of the deuce-and-a-half out of Germany to prevent his lynching by conspiracy-minded GIs.

  Also in December 1945, all American and Soviet troops permanently withdrew from Czechoslovakia, ending the multiple occupations that began with the Germans in 1938. A Soviet-aligned civilian government then took control of that nation.

  About The Author

  William Peter Grasso’s novels explore the concept change one thing…and watch what happens. Focusing on the WW2 era, they weave actual people and historical events into a seamless and entertaining narrative with the imagined. His books have spent several years in the Amazon Top 100 for Alternative History and War.

  A lifelong student of history, Grasso served in the US Army and is retired from the aircraft maintenance industry. These days, he confines his aviation activities to building and flying radio-controlled aircraft.

  Contact the Author Online:

  Email: William Peter Grasso

  Connect with the Author on Facebook:

  William Peter Grasso, Author

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  William Peter Grasso, Author

  More Novels by William Peter Grasso

  Our Ally, Our Enemy

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  France, October 1944: Fort Driant may be a 19th century anachronism, but it proves itself an impregnable obstacle to Patton's forces as they fight to seize the city of Metz, a gateway to Germany. Another fortress—a Flying Fortress—may be the key to the fall of Fort Driant. The Moon brothers are in the thick of the battle as Tommy volu
nteers for Operation Aphrodite, a gambit that turns unmanned heavy bombers into radio-controlled flying bombs of enormous power. But as zero hour for Aphrodite approaches, his brother Sean is trapped in the tunnels of Fort Driant, with the Germans just inches away behind armored doors. It's a race against time for the GIs to take Driant—or escape before the Flying Fortress falls.

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  Operation Fishwrapper

  Book 5

  Jock Miles WW2 Adventure Series

  June 1944: A recon flight is shot down over the Japanese-held island of Biak, soon to be the next jump in MacArthur’s leapfrogging across New Guinea. Major Jock Miles, US Army—the crashed plane’s intelligence officer—must lead the handful of survivors to safety. It’s a tall order for a man barely recovered from a near-crippling leg wound. Gaining the grudging help of a Dutch planter who has evaded the Japanese since the war began, Jock discovers just how little MacArthur’s staff knows about the terrain and defenses of the island they’re about to invade.

  The American invasion of Biak promptly bogs down, and the GIs rename the debacle Operation Fishwrapper, a joking reference to their worthless maps. The infantry battalion Jock once led quickly suffers the back-to-back deaths of two commanders, so he steps into the job once again, ignoring the growing difficulties with his leg. When his Aussie wife Jillian tracks down the refugee mapmaker who can refine those fishwrappers into something of military value, the tide of battle finally turns in favor of the Americans. But for Jock, the victory imparts a life-changing blow.

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  After surviving a deadly plane crash, Jock Miles is handed a new mission: neutralize a mountaintop observation post on Japanese-held Manus Island so MacArthur’s invasion fleet en route to Hollandia, New Guinea, can arrive undetected. Jock’s team seizes and holds the observation post with the help of a clever deception. But when they learn of a POW camp deep in the island’s treacherous jungle, it opens old wounds for Jock and his men: the disappearance—and presumed death—of Jillian Forbes at Buna a year before. There’s only one risky way to find out if she’s a prisoner there…and doing so puts their entire mission in serious jeopardy.

  Operation Easy Street

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  Port Moresby was bad. Buna was worse.

  The WW2 alternative history adventure of Jock Miles continues as MacArthur orders American and Australian forces to seize Buna in Papua New Guinea. Once again, the Allied high command underestimates the Japanese defenders, plunging Jock and his men into a battle they’re not equipped to win. Worse, jungle diseases, treacherous terrain, and the tactical fantasies of deluded generals become adversaries every bit as deadly as the Japanese. Sick, exhausted, and outgunned, Jock’s battalion is ordered to spearhead an amphibious assault against the well-entrenched enemy. It’s a suicide mission—but with ingenious help from an unexpected source, there might be a way to avoid the certain slaughter and take Buna. For Jock, though, victory comes at a dreadful price.

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  Alternative history takes center stage as Operation Long Jump, the second book in the Jock Miles World War 2 adventure series, plunges us into the horrors of combat in the rainforests of Papua New Guinea. As a prelude to the Allied invasion, Jock Miles and his men seize the Japanese observation post on the mountain overlooking Port Moresby. The main invasion that follows quickly degenerates to a bloody stalemate, as the inexperienced, demoralized, and poorly led GIs struggle against the stubborn enemy.

  Seeking a way to crack the impenetrable Japanese defenses, infantry officer Jock finds himself in a new role—aerial observer. He’s teamed with rookie pilot John Worth, in a prequel to his role as hero of Grasso’s East Wind Returns. Together, they struggle to expose the Japanese defenses—while highly exposed themselves—in their slow and vulnerable spotter plane.

  Long Walk to the Sun

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  Conceived in politics rather than sound tactics, the futile mission is a “show of faith” by the American war leaders meant to do little more than bolster their flagging Australian ally. For Jock Miles and the men of his patrol, it’s a death sentence: their enemy is superior in men, material, firepower, and combat experience. Even if the Japanese don’t kill them, the vast distances they must cover on foot in the treacherous natural realm of Cape York just might.

  Unpunished

  Congressman. Presidential candidate. Murderer.

  Leonard Pilcher is all of these things.

  As an American pilot interned in Sweden during WWII, he kills one of his own crewmen and gets away with it. Two people have witnessed the murder—American airman Joe Gelardi and his secret Swedish lover, Pola Nilsson-MacLeish—but they cannot speak out without paying a devastating price. Tormented by their guilt and separated by a vast ocean after the war, Joe and Pola maintain the silence that haunts them both...until 1960, when Congressman Pilcher’s campaign for his party’s nomination for president gains momentum. As he dons the guise of war hero, one female reporter, anxious to break into the “boy’s club” of TV news, fights to uncover the truth against the far-reaching power of the Pilcher family’s wealth, power that can do any wrong it chooses—even kill—and remain unpunished.

  East Wind Returns

  A young but veteran photo recon pilot in WWII finds the fate of the greatest invasion in history--and the life of the nurse he loves--resting perilously on his shoulders.

  “East Wind Returns” is a story of World War II set in July-November 1945 which explores a very different road to that conflict's historic conclusion. The American war leaders grapple with a crippling setback: Their secret atomic bomb does not work. The invasion of Japan seems the only option to bring the war to a close. When those leaders suppress intelligence of a Japanese atomic weapon poised against the invasion forces, it falls to photo reconnaissance pilot John Worth to find the Japanese device. Political intrigue is mixed with passionate romance and exciting aerial action--the terror of enemy fighters, anti-aircraft fire, mechanical malfunctions, deadly weather, and the Kamikaze. When shot down by friendly fire over southern Japan during the American invasion, Worth leads the desperate mission that seeks to deactivate the device.

  Table of Contents

  Table of Contents

  Novels by William Peter Grasso

  Copyright

  Author’s Note

  Chapter One

  Chapter Two

  Chapter Three

  Chapter Four

  Chapter Five

  Chapter Six

  Chapter Seven

  Chapter Eight

  Chapter Nine

  Chapter Ten

  Chapter Eleven

  Chapter Twelve

  Chapter Thirteen

  Chapter Fou
rteen

  Chapter Fifteen

  Chapter Sixteen

  Chapter Seventeen

  Chapter Eighteen

  Chapter Nineteen

  Chapter Twenty

  Chapter Twenty-One

  Chapter Twenty-Two

  Chapter Twenty-Three

  Chapter Twenty-Four

  Chapter Twenty-Five

  Chapter Twenty-Six

  Chapter Twenty-Seven

  Chapter Twenty-Eight

  Chapter Twenty-Nine

  Chapter Thirty

  Chapter Thirty-One

  Epilogue—Author’s Note

  More Novels by William Peter Grasso

 

 

 


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