by Gee, Colin
RAF Coastal Command’s printing and distribution service had decided to send the full Northern Ireland allocation of the latest intelligence manuals to RAF Belfast, from where they could be easily distributed. That flawed decision, as it was not made clear to those who received them they should be sent on, was about to bear terrible fruit.
NS-X passed on the submarine’s port side at eight hundred yards distance, a few figures now obvious on the submarine’s wet hull and in the conning tower.
Magic Malan piped up.
“That could be the latest German type XXI they never got to deploy, Skipper. Very streamlined, no gun mounts. It fits.”
“Anyone else?”
Rolf Pienaar, the mid-upper gunner chipped in.
“I think Magic’s right, Skipper.”
The intercom went silent as Cox considered his options.
“I am identifying that as an enemy submarine. It’s not an Amphion Class, which we were told was in the area. Agree?”
All those who had examined the sleek vessel agreed.
“Skipper, definitely, definitely, not Amphion Class. Conning tower all wrong... no gun mount forward. Bow section’s wrong too.”
Magic had put his book alongside that of Erasmus the Flight Engineer for comparison.
“Roger, Sparks, get a message off. Attacking confirmed Soviet submarine. Get the location and send it.”
“Best you stay here, Arsey. Just in case.”
The Sunderland swept around and took up a stern approach position. Cox upped the throttles and adjusted the aircraft’s height.
“Pilot. Crew. Attacking. Good luck fellahs.”
Onboard S-31, the appearance of the large amphibian caused a near-panic. The Soviet Captain called his men to order, knowing that he could not dive without letting the Sunderland attack unmolested.
So he did all he could, which was fight back.
The Sunderland crew’s knowledge of the Type XXI was incomplete. German U-Boats had traditionally sprouted AA guns all over the conning tower, the more as the war went on and German submarine losses to aircraft climbed.
The XXI stepped back from that, anticipating its superior submersible qualities would keep it out of harm’s way most of the time.
However, putting a submarine to see with no close defence would have been mad, and the designers of the ElektroBootes were not in that category.
In sleek sponsons, fore and aft on the conning tower, sat twin 20mm automatic weapons, easily missed by those who had studied the U Boats of the previous war or, in the case of the crew of NS-X, had seen snaps of such things at anchor.
The rear sponson hammered out a steady stream of cannon shells that slowly rose into the air until it seemed that the giant aircraft consumed them.
The Sunderland overflew the B-31, its rear guns lashing out and wiping men off the deck and into the sea where some died before the waters overtook them.
The depth-charges stayed in the racks and the aircraft adopted a steady southerly course.
20mm cannon shells are unforgiving things and NS-X was mortally wounded.
Dagga was dead, his position chewed to pieces by explosive shells, his guns silenced without firing a shot.
Also dead were Sparks and Jason Witt, in pieces, along with much of their equipment.
Flight Sergeant Peter Malan had lost his radar but had not been touched by any of the storm of steel that had swept through the Sunderland.
Dead too were Dusty Miller and Tiger, the former ignominiously smashed as he sat on the latrine, the latter decapitated by a direct hit.
Sat in the second seat Arsey started to recover his senses, having temporarily blacked out.
He became aware of a low animal sound near his left side.
As his eyes cleared the bile rose in his throat and he brought up the recent bacon sandwich, his stomach rebelling at the sight of the pilot.
Cox was still alive, and by an extraordinary effort, he had managed to flick the autopilot on, which steadied the damaged bird and took her away from danger.
The pilot had lost his left arm and left leg as the torrent of metal had flayed the palace. Further pieces of metal had emptied his left eye socket.
Erasmus arrived like a drunk, his unsteady gait giving testament to the horrors he had endured in the area he occupied with the navigator and wireless operator.
“Gimme a hand, Aidan... we gotta get the skipper out!”
Grabbing hold of something so ravaged and destroyed was not easy, but they managed, Cox’s awful moaning lending both strength and compassion to both men.
Arsey slipped into the sticky pilot’s chair and hooked up.
“Crew check. Call in.”
Responses came solely from Malan, Pienaar, and Van der Blumme.
‘Oh hell.’
“Magic, get up to the palace now and give Aidan a hand. The Skipper is hit bad. Chris, Rolf, stay put and keep your eyes peeled. I need to check out the bus.”
As Peter Malan arrived to help Erasmus carry the hideously wounded Cox below, Crozier examined the flight deck.
The cold was intense, but not unbearable, ocean air being driven in thru countless holes.
Many gauges were useless, either broken or not registering because of damage elsewhere.
The autopilot, developed for the Mark V’s long over ocean flights, was clearly working.
He grasped the control column and flipped off the autopilot, ready to instantly react to any problem in handling that arose.
The aircraft was perfectly trimmed and responded easily to his gentle commands. Using his foot controls, he tested more responses and was satisfied that he could control the Sunderland fully. He ignored the severed piece of Cox’s left leg that lay next to the pedals.
“Pilot. Crew. Aircraft is fine. Action stations.”
To their credit, none of the survivors of NS-X questioned either the order to attack or the fact that it was given by a Flight Sergeant gunner who wasn’t qualified to pilot the aircraft.
Magic’s voice broke in his ear.
“Skipper’s gone.”
Advancing the throttles, Crozier turned the leviathan back towards the enemy submarine.
“OK Magic, take over Dagga’s guns. Make them keep their heads down on the run in.”
“Roger, Skipper”, the words tumbling out of Malan’s mouth in spite of himself.
Leaving Aidan Erasmus to cover up the dead pilot, Malan made his way forward, into the charnel house that was the nose section.
At three miles out the Sunderland steadied itself, making a beam approach to what was now clearly a rapidly diving soviet submarine.
Nose and mid-upper machine guns sang out, sending a stream of deadly projectiles at B-31, many of which rang noisily off the casing and plates, unsettling those in the hull. The 20mm shells had damaged the firing system, so the vengeful Crozier could not fire the forward fixed .50’s and add to the submariner’s miseries.
At half a mile out only the top of the conning tower was visible, and Pienaar could no longer bear. He switched his guns to the rear in case further opportunity presented itself. Malan continued to flay the elektroboote for all he was worth.
Releasing the depth bombs, Crozier accepted the leap as the aircraft gained height and commenced a port turn as both Van der Blumme and Pienaar whipped up the waters.
All four charges exploded, sending a mountain of water skywards.
Damage to the aircraft’s monitoring systems meant it was some time before the crew realised the starboard outer engine was on fire and that leaking fuel, similarly alight, was creeping slowly and inexorably along the wing.
The Type XXI was innovative for a number of reasons. Hydrogen peroxide engines, high capacity electric engines for unheard of underwater speeds; A superbly efficient schnorkel system and automatic reloading system for its torpedoes.
One unusual aspect of its production was that it was assembled from pieces, with a number of cylindrical component sections brought together and assembled
into a whole.
During the previous war, when Allied aircraft looked for anything to bomb, a U-Boat in production made a tasty target. With this system, the XXI could be made in pieces, in small nondescript workshops, and then assembled secretly.
Two such sections had been welded together under canvas in the Gdansk Yards in early July.
Frame six comprised the rear section of the control suite and frame seven, the forward section of the main engine room.
NS-X’s bombs were perfectly placed.
Two struck the hull either side of the conning tower and sunk on the port side of the submarine. One ploughed through the periscope stanchion, deflecting it towards the bow section.
The final bomb struck the stern and angled off, ending up on the starboard side of the B-31, perfectly in between the bursts of the other two bombs.
The effect of all three detonating virtually simultaneously on both sides of the hull was similar to placing a cardboard tube on a house brick and then pushing down on either side.
The rupture was immediate and wholly catastrophic.
B-31’s engine was instantly flooded and the broached control room uninhabitable within seconds.
The Elektroboote B-31, once known as U-3536 [unfinished] took fifty-eight soviet seamen and six German civilian advisors to the sea floor below.
It was Van der Blumme who noticed the smoke and shouted the warning.
All eyes swivelled in the direction of the starboard wing, assessing the danger.
Fire buttons were thumbed and extinguishing media helped a little with the engine, but the fuel leak and external fire were slowly affecting the wing.
“Pilot. Aidan, have a look at Jason’s charts. Get a course for the nearest land. Can’t be far.”
Flying Officer Erasmus made his way up into the navigator’s position and tried hard to fathom what he could from the map.
Pienaar and Van der Blumme quickly discussed the likelihood of having killed the Russian.
“Fucking shut up now! Aidan, talk to me.”
“Due south, Rafer, head due south. We should hit Ireland.”
Responding quickly, Arsey moved the aircraft onto a dead south course, sorting out the engine revs of the three working power plants.
Aidan Erasmus slid the body of Sparks Warner to one side and worked on the radio.
NS-X flew steadily south, carefully nurtured by a gunner-cum-failed-pilot, who looked at the spreading dark stain in his lap with more concern as each minute passed.
A growing whine preceded graunching sounds from protesting metal as the port inner surrendered to friction, the absence of coolant neither known nor suspected, as gauges failed to show the fatal rise in temperature.
The engine seized and immediately affected the characteristics of the Sunderland, even though Crozier reacted swiftly and feathered, reducing the effect of the idle propeller.
“Flight. Skipper.”
Erasmus experienced the joy of success as the sound of static over the speaker illustrated he had breathed life into the damaged radio.
“Go ahead Aidan.”
“I think I have the radio up. Going to send sitrep and position ok?”
“Good effort, and keep sending. I can’t see land yet mind you.”
Erasmus keyed the transmit button and spelled out the rough position of NS-X, as well as the condition of the crew.
He managed it for nearly six minutes before a gentle fizz marked the permanent end of communications.
1411 hrs, Monday, 5th November 1945, Eastern Atlantic, 8 miles north of North-Western Éire.
“Mid Upper, Skipper.”
“Go ahead, Rolf.”
Pienaar was too excited and relieved for all the formalities.
“I can see land, manne, Straight ahead. Ireland.”
Crozier strained his eyes and then saw for himself.
‘Ireland. Thank fuck’
Grabbing charts of the Irish coast, Erasmus moved into the palace and looked for landmarks as the forbidding coastline grew clearer. The absence of land to the far west helped greatly.
Looking up and looking down, Erasmus spoke the obvious.
“Fuck man, we only just caught the edge of Ireland. We could have been flying all the way to the Equator.”
‘Or not’, both men thought, knowing they would have crash landed in the Atlantic and never been heard of again,
“Pilot. Crew. I’m going to drop the old girl down soon and we’ll sail her into the coast. Don’t want to take risks with her temperatures.”
A worrying whine from the port outer engine emphasised the decision.
“Aidan is working on our position. We’ll find a place to moor up, somewhere sheltered. Then we can decide if we fancy internment or whether we wanna to get back in this war.”
The Sunderland dropped closer to the water and made a textbook landing on the light swell.
The starboard wing tank was virtually empty, which meant the external fire died quickly but the remaining engine started to misfire, as it could not draw a steady supply of fuel.
‘A close run thing that.’
Rafer Crozier, Arsey to his friends, was surprised at how calmly he handled all that the damaged bird could throw at him.
Still engrossed in his map, Aidan tapped a section, drawing Crozier’s attention to the headland.
“Go port side of the headland for sure, more protected from the Atlantic, Rafer.”
That made sense.
Momentum and the remaining full power engine was all he needed to nurse NS-X in close to shore, round the headland, seeking a suitable place to drop anchor.
Keeping a suitable distance from the starboard shoreline, Crozier ignored the first inlet, rounding a two hundred metre peninsular and deciding it was as good a spot as any.
He suddenly realised that he had not organised the anchor party.
“Pilot. Magic. Pilot, VDB. Stand by anchors.”
Both men had prepared themselves and not intended to criticise the man who had saved them, sunk the Russian sub, and avenged their comrades.
Crozier cut his switches, allowing the last vestiges of forward momentum to bring him to perfect position.
“Away forward, away aft.”
Both anchors bit and the wounded aircraft lay safely at rest in the lee of the small peninsular.
Crozier closed his eyes and prayed, giving his God full thanks for the mercy and grace he had shown his son that day.
Pienaar arrived with a thermos of coffee and poured Arsey a full measure.
The warm beverage tasted like nectar to the exhausted and wounded man, lifting his spirit as only simple pleasures following extremes of terror and fear can.
“Right then, Aidan. Where are we?”
“Right on the money as it happens. We’re a short dinghy ride from civilisation, and I can smell the Guinness already.”
The three laughed, aware that sounds of movement meant that Malan and possibly even Van der Blumme were making their way up to the palace.
“And what’s the name of this oasis of pleasure?”
Erasmus squinted and confirmed the facts, affecting an upper class English accent.
“Well, if I’m right about where we are, yonder lies the fair Irish hamlet of Glenlara and a welcome fit for heroes.”
Their eyes were drawn in the direction he was pointing and they could already see men dragging three boats down a ramp leading to the water’s edge.
It was as well that they could not hear.
“English bastards! Not a man, Seamus, not a fucking man.”
His number two, Seamus Brown, had already sprinted away, joining the throng of IRA volunteers at the boats.
Reynolds had been christened Judas but no one called him that. Patrick, his second name, was favourite unless seeking a fight and an early grave.
Judas Patrick Reynolds had seen combat on the streets and hillsides of Spain during the Civil War and had revelled in its nastiness. He brought the lessons he learned home and subse
quently acquired a reputation within IRA circles as an extremist, in every sense of the word.
Standing out in a group of extremists meant that Reynolds was marked for either an early grave or higher things.
Powerful men believed that the latter was most appropriate and a brief period of posturing and murder commenced.
But he had survived the internal squabbling that left fourteen families grieving, which culminated with his former unit commander on the wrong end of a shotgun. The hierarchy decided that enough was enough and they pulled the ‘rabid dog’ back into the fold by giving him leadership of the unit he had so recently made leaderless.
Judas Reynolds commanded the IRA Battalion based in County Mayo, a grand title for less than two hundred men, although most of them were to hand right now.
From his vantage point in the little school house, he could see the damaged British Sunderland and a handful of men waving from the now open hatch.
Turning to his companion, he reassured the worried man.
“This is no problem, Captain. We’ll dispose of the aircraft and crew down the coast. No attention’ll be drawn to our nest.”
He turned to the imposing man in the dark blue uniform.
“Trust me, Ilya.”
Trusting a man whose life had been spent in deception and treachery did not come easy to Captain-Lieutenant Ilya Nazarbayev, Commander of Special Action Force 27, Soviet Naval Marines.
However, he had little choice.
“Word for word, that’s what it said?”
“Yes, Sir.”
“OK, thank you, Sergeant. Dismissed.”
Squadron Leader Benjamin Viljoen was trying to remain detached, but it was difficult with his brother listed amongst the overdue.
He re-read the message chit, desperately seeking something that he knew was not there.
‘Both pilots down... Crozier flying... Type XXI submarine probably sunk... heading due south... position roughly thirty miles north of mainland Ireland.’
Viljoen moved to the Operations Centre to organise the morning’s rescue efforts. Confirmation that NS-X’s had sunk the submarine was received right on 1700hrs, but did not lessen the anguish and pain he felt. Only seeing Dagga again would do that.