by Dean Ing
FLYING TO PIECES
By Dean Ing
Synopsis:
Two floors up, Lovett was ushered into a room where he found Elmo Benteen behind a curtain, with tubes in both arms and another taped below his nostrils. "Aw Jesus, Elmo," was all Lovett could say.
The parchment eyelids fluttered open... Turning his head seemed to require heroic effort from Benteen, whose lips formed the faintest of smiles.
"Just cut it too close with the sour mash," he said, so low that Lovett moved nearer. "Well, they warned me. Call it pilot error."
"They'll have you up and around again, nice as you please, if you just behave."
"You don't get it, Wade. Listen up, 'cause this is what they call a death or death situation." A long breath, as if marshaling energy. Then: "Early in '45, back when your fist was still a virgin, the Japs hid away a fleet of planes for an all-out suicide war when we invaded Japan."-
Another pause, as Benteen's eyes closed. "Hundreds of planes, maybe thousands, stashed everywhere. More than they had pilots to fly 'em. They were recruiting high school kids as pilots near the end, and we were finding late-model aircraft hid away for years afterward, regular aerial armada."
He fell silent for a long moment, and Lovett touched the thin wrist nearest him. The eyes opened. "Wade?" The hand groped for Lovett's, gripped with surprising strength. "But they didn't find 'em all. I found a half-dozen, maybe the last on earth in mint condition, in a cave twenty years later, after my forced landing. I believe they're still waitin' for the day that didn't come. It's a fuckin' bonanza, kid."
ALSO BY DEAN ING
The Big Lifters
Blood of Eagles
Butcher Bird
The Nemesis Mission
The Ransom of Black Stealth One
Silent Thunder
Single Combat
The Skins of Dead Men
Spooker
Systemic Shock
Wild Country
A TOM DOHERTY ASSOCIATES BOOK
NEW YORK
NOTE: If you purchased this book without a cover you should be aware that this book is stolen property. It was reported as "unsold and destroyed" to the publisher, and neither the author nor the publisher has received any payment for this "stripped link."
This is a work of fiction. All the characters and events portrayed in this book are either products of the author's imagination or are used fictitiously.
FLYING TO PIECES
Copyright @ 1997 by Dean Ing All rights reserved, including the right to reproduce this book, or portions thereof, in any form.
Map by Mark Stein Studios.
A Tor Book Published by Tom Doherty Associates, Inc. 175 Fifth Avenue New York, NY 10010
Tor Books on the World Wide Web: http://www.tor.com Tore is a registered trademark of Tom Doherty Associates, Inc.
ISBN: 0-812-54841-8
Library of Congress Card Catalog Number. 97-6275
First edition: August 1997 First mass market edition: September 1998
Printed in the United States of America 0 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1
For Rob and David, who helped wrangle the little winged beast
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
my brain trust of vintage throttle jockeys, especially Ted Voulgaris, contributed much with hair-raising accounts of the propeller era. This time, they were aided in some areas by airmen Bill Knowles, Dan Denney, David Guerriero, Wayne Reavis, Smithsonian aircraft wizards Tom Alison and Rich Horigan, music maven Karen Kammerer, the lovely and radiant Peter Sage, marine engineer Mark McAdams, and our family Alaskans, Glenn and Valerie Ing-Miller. Though the following tale is-like Fundabora-chiefly fictional, I learned that its central wild-hare idea is rooted in fact; more than one stash of "pickled" Japanese treasures have actually been found hidden in the manner, and for the purpose, described here.
For background lore on the Nippon of the 1930s I am indebted to author John Patric, whose wanderings through Japan yielded, in 1943, the wonderfully readable Why Japan Was Strong. Scholars of that period, and of strategic warfare, will find this book brimful of astonishing insight.
PROLOGUE
If Elmo Benteen hadn't raised so much hell at his last B.O.F. party, he might have lived to throw another one. Or maybe not; Elmo was loopy as a bedspring, having fought off half the tropical diseases known to medical science and too much of the VD. By now, Elmo's organs had become stony where they should be soft and, he admitted on his deathbed, soft when they ought to be hard. Every surviving member of the Boring Old Farts agreed he was past due; Elmo was a legend, but it had taken him more than eighty years and damned near that many airplane crashes. The only surprise was, it was finally his innards that crashed.
That's not strictly true. Elmo had a second surprise for his B.O.F. buddies, and at first they thought it was just the stuff running through tubes into his arms that was doing the talking. Some of them figured he hadn't converted all those smuggled Cambodian rubies to money, and maybe that was what he meant by a huge stash. But after a little judicious illegal entry, when the last words of the late Elmo Benteen finally became clear, most of the B.O.F.s emitted variations of, "I don't believe a word of it," or, "This gives a whole new meaning to 'risk capital'," or, more succinctly, "At my age? No dice."
But there are a few old pilots like Wade Lovett who, smart enough to survive to retirement age, are still dumb enough to sucker themselves into a box canyon or beneath an anvil cloud, if the reason seems good enough to risk flying to pieces. When the reasons include several millions in cash and a paragraph in aviation history, these few will step forward, betting that experience will bring them through. Amelia Earhart had lost that bet and Fred Noonan with her, two generations before, in the same corner of the world where Elmo Benteen later recorded his great stash. But most of the B.O.F.s remembered Earhart as a pilot of great courage and indifferent skills, and themselves as "good sticks" - superior pilots. They also figured that, if ol' Elmo had got in and out again with a whole skin, the risks would be chiefly financial.
So much for the wisdom of Boring Old Farts.
Actually, the trouble didn't start at Elmo's deathbed; it all began when he declared a National Emergency...
1
Even though the city reached out westward toward Rolling Hills, Kansas, the air traffic from Wichita's Mid-Continent Airport kept Wade Lovett's condo affordable because some folks don't like to live under an aerial on-ramp. Still, for each housewife who wakes up fearful whenever a Boeing's low pass shakes dust motes into her moonlit bedroom, some solitary wing nut like Lovett smiles without waking.
No mystery about that. For many years Wichita has been home to half the aircraft constructors in the country, and the area boasts more aircraft freaks than farmers. When a bug decorates his windshield Re: a Jackson Pollock, the driver twangs, "Wow, must've been a twin Piper." That's how many airplanes infest Wichita, and their thunder roars a duet of future money and past adventures to old guys like Lovett. No wonder they smile in their sleep.
But Lovett hadn't done much smiling when awake lately, though the business of trading used aircraft was going well at his hangar. When he padlocked the big multifold hangar doors, that cloudy afternoon in late April and climbed into his sporty silver Mazda coupe, Lovett tried to avoid replaying the litany of downers that, he felt, would've had the prophet Job dancing with fury.
He knew he should've kept his Ford pickup with the winch and lift gate, because you can't shoehorn a goddamn crate full of Lycoming engine into the trunk of a goddamn racy foreign coupe. But he'd traded up to surprise his seventeen-year-old grandson, give the beloved elitist twirp more reason to enjoy his summer visit, and three days ago Chip had provided his own surprise, writing to say he wouldn't be coming after all.
Dow
ners Number One and Two. Mayday, who had Number Three was the defection checked out, "gone west" in pilot's parlance, augured in, all right then goddamn it, died, with what the vet said was a full cargo of kidney stones. He had raised that fool from a kitten the size of a flea's hood ornament, a fiftieth birthday present from a woman whose name he'd now forgotten. That made Mayday, what was it, nearly thirteen when he bought the farm. It had taken Wade Lovett longer to get over Mayday, his only housemate, than seemed possible. You wouldn't think a satisfied loner in his sixties would go all misty-eyed over something with a brain the general size and usefulness of a mildewed walnut, Lovett told himself, squirting the Mazda north on Tyler Road, ignoring the towers of cloud to his left that were backlit by God's own rosy runway light. And suddenly he felt guilty. it was one thing to verbally abuse the talkative black tom to his whiskers, so to speak; tell him that any cat who would stand meowing before a closed door for an hour when an open one was in plain sight ten feet away, well, such a cat was dumb as a radish and deserved his imprisonment. Mayday's gaze had always said he understood those jibes were just male-bonding bullshit by a man who had nobody else-barring visits by Chip and an occasional pretty lady, needed no one else-to talk to, evenings in the condo.
It was something else, though, to debase Mayday's currency when he was no longer current. it wasn't fair, it was mean-spirited.
"I'm sorry, Mayday," Lovett said aloud, easing from the flow of traffic, then toward parking slot #16.
What was worse, Wade Lovett was chiefly sorry for himself, and knew it.
He turned off the ignition and sat blinking at his windshield for a long moment and someone pulled into slot #15, doubtless the new neighbor he hadn't met. He didn't care to meet him now, either. Was this how you felt when old age crept up on you? Maybe he should get another kitten, and as soon as possible.
He got out of the car, shaking his head, and muttered, "One Mayday was enough."
"Isn't that a cry for help?"
Lovett turned and saw, over the top of the adjacent classic Porthole Thunderbird, big brown eyes regarding him with honest interest. They belonged to a woman who could hardly see over her little T-Bird, perky side of fifty, and he realized he had spoken aloud. "Sometimes it is."
He smiled by reflex. "Looks like you could use some help yourself."
She let him take one of her bulging grocery sacks and, sure enough, she was the new tenant next 'door, and by the time Lovett sat alone in his kitchen to sort his mail he had agreed to a martini later in the evening. He still got invitations like that because his thick graying hair was still unruly and his dimpled killer smile apparently ageless.
He still accepted the invitations if the lady seemed mature enough to take little disappointments in stride. All his life, one way or another, Wade Lovett had eventually disappointed women.
He tossed the junk mail to one side and used the blade of his Swiss Army knife, the one that would fillet a bass, to slit the single personal letter. The return address was Irvine, California, so he figured in advance it would be from old Elmo Benteen.
It was a single photocopied page declaring a National Emergency at the offices of Bentwing Associates-Elmo went through associates like a dose of salts through a fasting guru - on a Friday evening two weeks hence.
Lovett knew there would be maybe forty copies of the B.O.F. letter, because more than half of the hundred-odd Boring Old Farts had already cashed in their short snorters; and of that forty perhaps half of them would be able to make it to the boozy reunion known to them all as a National Emergency.
The B.O.F.s had no officials and only two requirements: you had flown military missions around the Pacific or Chinaburma-India-Korea and Southeast Asia counted, too-and in the process you'd got your tail feathers caught in a crack by some desk dildo, maybe a general. A court-martial helped you in, but one "no" vote by any member kept you out, so the really bad bastards never qualified. Garden-variety bastards were common, though; and if you didn't consume alcohol, why the hell would you attend a National Emergency anyhow?
The B.O.F. title had emerged from a Carews booze-scented blowout in Darwin, Australia, back in '42 when the Japanese Navy was practically in the harbor. Some transport pilot, scheduled for the duration to fly many tons of explosive cargo very slowly and unarmed through a sky full of Mitsubishi Zeroes, said his only remaining ambition was to live long enough that his war stories would qualify him as a boring old fart. That became a toast, and the toast became a rallying cry, and when some smartass dreamed up an unofficial patch the Boring Old Farts got a slogan, too; stolen, naturally, from the First Troop Carrier Command.
The patch showed two winged purple shafts crossed over a pipe and slippers, with a legend beneath: vincrr QLTI PRIMUM GERIT; He Conquers Who First Grows Old, or, The Old Fart Wins.
It was understood that the member who called an emergency footed its bills except for breakage and, now and then, bail; those blowouts were not exactly formal affairs and you didn't bring your wife because she might get into a dustup with one of the strippers. It had been nearly a year since the last bash and Lovett smiled to reflect that old Elmo, now in his eighties, was still kicking. Lovett was pleased to see that the emergency was to be held in the Bentwing offices, which meant Elmo's hangar at John Wayne Airport in Orange County, with the planes booted outside and a bunch of tables for the girls to strut on. He'd done that once before.
started flying in formation, they wouldn't hit anything beyond "Wise move, Elmo," Lovett muttered. When the bottles the hangar. The B.O.F.s had tried hiring American Legion halls, private clubs, and in one case, a country club. The tabs for wear and tear had proven greater than those for food, booze, and entertainment combined. Actually, they had it down to a science by now. You put your keys, along with everybody else's, in the same box with a combination lock when you came in. If you couldn't work the combination a few hours later and then find your way out of a hangar, you had no business operating a vehicle. Some people said, those weren't just awfully exacting standards. The hell with them.
Lovett toyed with the idea of passing on this one. It would be a long cross-country alone to Southern California in his Varieze, a swept-wing little two-holer he had built from Rutan plans when plastic airplanes were still exotic. He would hear the same stories again, tell some of them himself, like the time over Korea when one of the Mighty Mouse rockets fire. d from his own F-84 started doing slow rolls until he passed it, and his slipstream sucked it toward him like a big explosive bullet with his name on it. The Mighty Mouse wasn't a smart munition, but neither were you if you trusted it. This one was so dumb it sideswiped his wing without taking half of it off.
Yeah, stories like that, some of them embellished with each retelling.
The problem, he realized, was that the B.O.F.s really were boring old farts now to most outsiders. And it would be a long flight back, nursing a hangover. On the other hand, he could spend a night or two with his daughter, Roxanne, and more to the point, Chip would be there. Lovett's hesitation was more bullshit, and it didn't take him in. scraw
"Hold a tiedown space for my Varieze," on the Xerox/and, sought an envelope for it. With all the oddball aircraft Elmo rented out to the more adventurous of the Hollywood crowd, surely there would be room.
And this time, with most of his fellow Farts pushing seventy or more, maybe it would end without major trouble for somebody. Yeah; right.
Lovett inverted his schedule at the last minute after calling Roxanne, and flew first to Santa Cruz. It seemed that Chip had a piano recital on Wednesday night and Roxy hinted that, first, the kid would appreciate his granddad's putting in an appearance, and second, a little culture wouldn't hurt her father any. Lovett sighed and complied. Sure, it might cost him a sale in Wichita, but you couldn't expect Roxy to think along those lines. Unlike her father, Roxanne needed more money like Manuel Noriega needed more zits.
Moving to Santa Cruz with Tess after the divorce, Roxanne Lovett had grown tall and comely like her mo on Te
ss's schedule Roxy had married Tom Mason, a regular guy, the only son in a "good,"
meaning flush with real estate, Santa Cruz family. Tom had lived long enough to influence his son Childress-Chip-and, thank God, Tom had hit it off right away with Wade Lovett in spite of Mason family reservations about a clapped-out old test pilot who traded noisy little airplanes for a living.
Tom Mason had reared Chip to the age of ten, cheered him at Little League and steered him toward respect for Lovett, before a zonked trucker hunted Tom off the Coast Highway one night. Along that cliff side stretch, a man who leaves the macadam doesn't need an airbag; he needs an ejection seat with chute attached.
After that, Roxanne Lovett-Mason raised Chip. With Mason money and a full-time maid in her yuppie Santa Cruz chalet, Roxy had plenty of time to redirect her son in genteel ways. She remained her mother's kid but she still loved Wade, wrote him faithfully three times a year, and had no objection to letting Chip spend a few weeks in Wichita every summer as a birthday present.
"He thinks you're from the Planet Gosh," she once told Lovett, then gave her other reason with'an ominous murmur;
and there is very little surfing in Kansas." The surfing off Santa Cruz was, she felt, an altogether too-seductive competitor to Chip's piano lessons.
So when Wade Lovett greased his Varieze onto the runway at Watsonville Municipal, ten miles from Roxy's Santa Cruz place, Chip was waiting with his mom's mud-brown Mercedes.