A Yankee Flier in Italy (a yankee flier)

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A Yankee Flier in Italy (a yankee flier) Page 8

by Rutherford G. Montgomery Al Avery

“Has Colonel Benson been asking about us?” Stan asked and there was a twinkle in his eye.

  “I believe it will be best to transfer you to another command. We do not wish to approve your conduct as ferry pilots, but you certainly have rendered a great service.” The general gave his attention to the phone. After fifteen long minutes of waiting and talking he cradled the instrument and shook his head. “No Nardi fighters have been reported flown in by escaped American pilots. A number have come in piloted by Italian officers.”

  “Thank you, sir,” Stan said. “I would like to have immediate service in a fighter squadron.”

  “That will be arranged from my office. Now get into some proper clothing and report to Mess Nine. Hold yourself ready there to report to this office. We have a lot of questions to ask and we’ll be ready to start asking them as soon as you are clothed and fed.”

  Stan snapped a salute and about-faced. He marched out of the office, got the location of Mess Nine from an orderly, and headed in that direction.

  CHAPTER X

  LONE EAGLE

  A week passed with Stan lounging around Mess Nine waiting to be assigned to a fighter squadron. During that time he divided his hours between the officers at Intelligence and the board of strategy. He rubbed elbows with generals, British and American and French. During those interviews he got an idea of the great campaign which was being planned. It helped to soften the ache inside him, because he had heard nothing from O’Malley or Allison. It also helped to keep him from getting restless. He knew that a great reserve of air power was being assembled to throw an umbrella of planes over the coming thrust, which was aimed at the heart of Germany, through or across Italy.

  The second week was well under way and everyone, except the generals, was beginning to complain and to cast a critical eye at the headquarters of General Dwight D. Eisenhower and General Harold R. L. G. Alexander. Stan knew enough of the plans from his meetings with the officers to know that the blow was coming, and that it would be a swift, savage thrust.

  One morning he received a call. It was delivered by an orderly. Stan opened the folded sheet and read an order from headquarters. “Report to Colonel Benson at once for assignment.” Stan stared at the order. Benson had located him and demanded his return. The friendly general who had promised to transfer Stan was now in North Africa. Folding the report, Stan began packing the few things he owned. Colonel Benson’s command had been moved up to a field close to Messina. That was some comfort. It meant action as soon as the main invasion broke.

  But Stan was uneasy. There were many nasty jobs around a fighter squadron to which he could be assigned as punishment for his part in the ferry mess. When Stan was given a low-powered observation plane to fly to Messina, his worst fears seemed about to be realized.

  The plane was a Ryan ST-3, a plane used for basic training back home and for odd jobs of scouting, ferrying first-aid supplies, and other non-combat jobs. It was sleek and fast, as light planes go, but it was far from a fighter.

  Stan sent the Ryan up and headed her north by a point or two east. The Ryan showed surprising speed for the size of her engine. Stan grinned as he gunned her. He got to thinking that after the war he would like to own a ship like it.

  Swinging in around Mount Etna’s cone, he set down on the Italian field where Colonel Benson’s boys were holding forth. A field officer took his papers and waved him toward a row of drab buildings.

  “The commander wants to see you at once.” He spoke gruffly and showed no interest at all in Stan.

  Stan unloaded his gear in the briefing room and walked across to the colonel’s headquarters. The door was open and he looked into a room barely large enough for a table and three chairs. Colonel Benson was seated at the table. He looked up and when he saw Stan he frowned.

  “Come in, Lieutenant Wilson,” he called.

  Stan stepped inside, saluted, and stood waiting.

  “Sit down.” The colonel motioned to a chair.

  Stan seated himself and waited. The colonel regarded him for a moment, then started to speak.

  “In all of the years I have been in service I have never read a report like the one handed to me. That report covers your activities as ferry pilot in my command.” The colonel shifted some papers on his desk, selected one and began reading it silently.

  “Yes, sir,” Stan said, feeling some reply was called for.

  “It is a continuous recital of violations of orders resulting in a great deal of trouble. In my opinion it deserves drastic action.” His cold eyes stabbed into Stan.

  “Yes, sir,” Stan answered. He did not intend to argue, not at that moment.

  “Take this report.” A smile formed at the corners of the colonel’s mouth. “The Navy gives us the numbers from three planes that saved a warship from being sunk off Sicily. In checking the numbers we discover the planes are ferry planes bound for Malta.” He picked up another report. “Here is a memorandum from General Eisenhower citing Lieutenant Wilson for the delivery of vital documents from inside Italy.” The smile faded. “And there is a line mentioning Lieutenant’s O’Malley and Allison for covering your escape.” The colonel dropped the paper and leaned back.

  “Yes, sir,” was all Stan could say, but a warm glow was beginning to stir inside him.

  “And that last line is the reason for my calling for your services, Lieutenant. I have received a message brought in by an Italian pilot who managed to fly his plane over here.” He shoved a piece of soiled paper across to Stan. “It is addressed to you.”

  Stan caught the paper eagerly and read the scrawled lines upon it.

  “Shot down. Prisoners. Held in shed back of Bolero barns. Tony with us. One of the Bolero servants will try to smuggle this out.” The note was signed by Allison.

  “They’re alive!” Stan almost shouted.

  “They are,” the colonel said dryly.

  “They’ll be treated like spies and not prisoners of war. The Germans pulled that on us before,” Stan said anxiously.

  “You three seem marked down as irregulars,” the colonel said. “I now find myself in the position of becoming a party to your wild schemes.” He laughed outright. “I have not reported this to headquarters. I am afraid O’Malley and Allison should and would be marked down as expendables and left to be shot by the Germans.” He straightened and shoved the papers aside. “With a fast, light bomber, would you have a chance to land over there?”

  “I certainly would,” Stan said eagerly. “The Bolero boys have a secret landing strip where they hid their planes when they didn’t want Mussolini’s agents to trail them. That landing strip is just above the place where the Germans are holding Allison and O’Malley.”

  “In that case I’ll assign you a fast bomber and an objective. You will drop your bomb load at another spot and make a try.” His eyes were twinkling. “And if you should bring back Mussolini, I think you might get a medal.”

  They both laughed. Stan looked at his watch. “Dusk would be the time to hit there. I can make it tonight.”

  “As you like,” the colonel said. “Report to me at once when you get back. What information you gather should clear over my desk.” He grinned. “I am a bit of a politician, you see.”

  Stan saluted and made off while the colonel got busy on the telephone getting a ship assigned to him.

  When Stan reported to the briefing room he found the colonel there. The briefing officer and his second in command gave him his locations and his bombing data, the weather and the wind drift. Everything was very much routine and like a hundred other sorties being made hourly over selected targets by from one to fifty planes. The colonel walked out to the runway with Stan.

  They shook hands like old pals. Stan smiled. The colonel was deadly serious.

  “Landing almost on a German flying field isn’t going to be a soft touch,” he said grimly. “Not even with your luck.”

  Stan turned to his ship and his smile broadened. Colonel Benson had gone to considerable trouble in selecting
a bomber. The ship that stood with idling props was a De Havilland Mosquito. She was humpbacked like a codfish. Her forward gun opening and her nose greenhouse made her look like a fish. They furnished eyes and mouth. She was a plywood job, light, but the fastest bomber in the world.

  He waved a hand to the colonel and climbed up. None of the ground men seemed interested in his lack of crew or light bomb load. In the swelter and rush of round-the-clock operations the boys followed orders and rushed each job out, knowing that another ship had to be on the line as soon as one craft cleared a spot.

  Stan leaned back against the shock pad and checked his dials. He cracked the throttle a bit more and his powerful radials roared with surging power. The Mosquito shuddered and trembled against her chocks.

  “Ready, Flight Fifty-four?”

  “Ready,” Stan called back.

  “Lane Three, Flight Fifty-four.” The voice from the control tower snapped off.

  Stan eased up and signaled the men below. The chocks were jerked loose and Stan gunned the ship. She leaped forward with a snap that would have done credit to any fighter craft. Darting down the runway she hoiked her tail and was off before she had covered a fourth of the alloted space. Upward she roared like a streak. The boys on the ground grinned. The Mosquito got off so fast she was out of sight before any spotter could pick her up.

  Easing around in a wide circle, Stan put her nose into the wind and let her have her head. He settled himself to the job ahead, his pulses beating in tune with the roar of the slip stream of air piling up and rolling off the leading edges of his wings. A good ship, the De Havilland. She was the craft used to make regular flights between England and Malta. Too fast for interception, the Mosquitoes streaked right across Hitler’s Germany or across France, running supplies daily through enemy-guarded skies.

  The coast of Italy showed clearly ahead. Slipping in over Reggio Stan picked a rail line and checked with his eye. No need for a bombardier here. He lined up on the track and then spotted a short string of cars. The train was standing still and smoke lifted from its locomotive. Stan suspected some other Yank had spotted it and laid a stick of bombs on the track, blocking it.

  Stan knew he should cut loose his bombs and be on his way. But the feel of the Mosquito made him eager to try her out. This was an ideal target for the fast-flying bomber. If he went down he would be sure to stir up German fighter planes. The temptation was great. Stan nosed over and sent the Mosquito roaring down the chute. He lined up on the freight train as he went.

  The landscape wavered up at him. The train seemed to be twisting and turning like a snake trying to wiggle away, though he knew it was not moving. The wind ahead of his diving wings piled up and banked like invisible snow, making the plane shudder and shake. Stan grinned. Only the Lockheed Lightning could fly a dive fast enough to bank up air like snow; that was what he had always thought, but the diving Mosquito was doing it. Stan began to wonder if a ship made of plywood could take the strain of a pull-out after such a dive.

  He released his stick of bombs and the Mosquito bounced like a golf ball before the cutting edge of a driver. Up she went and Stan set himself against the “high G’s” he had to expect. First, as he started up, there was a blurring of vision, then a graying, and then a momentary blackout. Instantly the graying appeared before his eyes again, then the blurring, and a moment later clear vision. Stan whistled softly.

  “Some ship!” he muttered. “She makes anything I ever flew except the old Lightnings look slow.”

  Three Messerschmitts knifed down from a cloud, but the Mosquito was on her way under full throttle and leaving the toe of the Italian boot at a space-devouring pace. The Me pilots saw what they had picked up and slid off in disgust.

  The Mosquito went up so fast that Stan could not see the results of his attack upon the train. Heading east he caught sight of the bay of Taranto, then turned north. Flying on the east rim of a mountain ridge he bored along.

  Checking the miles off as best he could, Stan turned west when he thought he was opposite Naples. He zoomed up higher and higher until he spotted the city on the coast, then he eased around and ducked back and up into a layer of clouds. Darkness had not settled, but he figured he could slide in back of the ridge above the Bolero villa and spot the hidden landing strip.

  Easing down he clipped along the tops of the trees. Three Focke-Wulf 190 fighters spotted him and he made off, leaving them to wander above the hill country. Returning, he zoomed along the ridge. Back and forth he slid but failed to locate the strip. Again he was spotted and had to run for it. The next time he came back he flew along the top of the ridge, which caused no less than a dozen Jerry fighters to take after him. But he spotted the hidden strip before he made off.

  Dusk was beginning to settle when he came back. This time he had to land regardless of the fighter planes. He came in straight for the strip, flying so low he was below the trees in many spots. He was surprised to find that there was a natural avenue which allowed him to slide in under fair cover. The Bolero boys had selected their secret field well. One Me darted over to have a look, but did not dive down. Stan set himself and cut his engines. He was coming in now, either for a landing or a crash. Topping a row of small trees he let the Mosquito settle toward the grassy lane below.

  The wheels of the ship tipped the grass, then settled down solidly. Stan applied his brakes and eased into a smooth and even landing. As he rolled in, he spotted the big trees with overhanging branches where the Nardi fighters had been parked. Gunning the Mosquito a bit he slid under cover just as three Me’s roared past looking for him. They went on to the east, but came back to crisscross the ridge. Stan smiled. The German pilots seemed puzzled over the way a bomber had vanished into thin air.

  Swinging the Mosquito around under her own power he set her in position for a quick take-off, then began getting out his pack of rations and the light machine gun he had brought with him. He was eager to work his way down the bridle path before darkness settled completely.

  CHAPTER XI

  RESCUE

  Stan kept under cover until he located the bridle path leading over the ridge. The Me’s were still combing the ridge above, but the woods and the meadows were full of long shadows which made spotting a camouflaged object impossible.

  Moving down the path Stan kept a sharp watch for guards. The pathway was really a tunnel under the trees. Overlapping branches formed a natural roof. This cover made the path almost pitch-dark. But Stan moved swiftly. He wanted enough light to spot the prison where the boys were being held.

  Reaching the opening in the hedge he discovered that someone had moved the branches of the hedge row so that they entwined over the opening hiding it. Standing behind the hedge he listened. Judging by the sounds, there was plenty of activity in the camp, and Stan could see lights shining through the wall of leaves. A motorcycle roared and a truck motor joined it. Men’s voices could be heard clearly.

  Moving along the hedge Stan peered over it. He could see into the wide yard of the villa and also into the yards around the barns. Every building was lighted up and the place swarmed with Germans. Stan had never seen so many German officers in a single spot before. Groups of them sat around outdoor tables in the back yard of the villa. They were eating and drinking wine from the Bolero cellars. There was a lot of shouting and laughter.

  Stan turned to the barns. He moved along them until he could see the back yard of the big barn. Here there were a number of smaller sheds and barns as well as the kennels. All of them were lighted and so were the yards around them. Guards marched back and forth in front of the kennels and before three of the sheds. Stan was certain he had located the prisons, but there was no way of telling which one contained his pals. One thing was certain, the Germans felt safe here at Bolero Villa. They probably figured Allied bombers would think the place was Italian and leave it alone. The many trees hid the trucks, cars, and German soldiers from view. Stan grinned. When he got back, the bomber boys would know where to drop a sti
ck of bombs.

  This condition made it easy for Stan to observe because the guards figured their only job was to keep the prisoners from escaping. They were not worried about an attack. Moving around behind the kennels Stan found darkness. He managed to wiggle up to the back wall. There were no windows in the back of the shed. He checked the other guarded sheds and found no windows in the rear of them. Moving back to the hedge he crouched there watching the three buildings.

  The only way to get into any of those buildings was through the doors or one of the front windows. The windows were open and not barred, but at least a dozen guards patrolled the grounds. They were scattered out, making a blitz machine-gun attack difficult. By the time Stan had blasted the guards out of the way he would have several hundred officers and men attacking from the grounds below.

  A soldier approached one of the guards, spoke to him, then entered one of the buildings, a shed between the kennels and the third barn. A light flashed on and Stan could see men inside the building. They were packed in, standing close together, those he could see through the window. All of them were Italian soldiers.

  After a bit the soldier came out with an Italian officer walking ahead of him. They went directly to the grounds below. Stan eased along the hedge until he was opposite the kennels. Here he halted and parted the branches of the hedge. He listened intently. The prisoners in the kennels were talking but their voices were very low. One of them laughed and the guard at the door shouted an order in German. With the butt of his rifle he hammered against the sill. There was silence inside and then a voice called out:

  “Get away from that door, ye dirty spalpeen! Yer disturbin’ the pleasure o’ gentlemen!”

  Stan almost shouted. That was the voice of O’Malley. The guard beat harder upon the sill of the door and shouted louder. Stan heard Allison warning O’Malley to keep his mouth shut. Silence settled inside the building.

  Pulling out his sheath knife Stan began cutting a hole in the hedge. The hedge had been carefully tended by the Bolero gardener. The limbs of the shrubs had been entwined and laced together, making the hedge almost a solid wall. Stan cut away a large hole, leaving only a few branches over the inside to hide his work. Getting down he crawled into the opening.

 

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