Whitlock shouted a warning over the intercom, but it was too late. The Messerschmitt gave them a good raking before they could get off a shot or take any defensive measures.
The big holes in the thin aluminum skin appeared almost instantly, where there had been metal before. The 20 mm cannons of the German fighter had taken a big bite out of them. In places,
“Bronson’s been hit,” Whitlock announced over the intercom. “Everybody else OK? Stay awake back there. You know that bandit is going to come around again.”
“How bad is Bronson?” the bombardier asked. “You need some help up there?”
“He’s dead,” Whitlock said flatly. He was too shocked by Bronson’s death for it to even register. And there would be no time for it to sink in. He looked out the cockpit window at the rapidly approaching German fighter. “Here he comes again!”
The German made a second pass. This time, the crew of
Through the intercom, he could hear shouts of panic and alarm. Had anyone else been hit? He glanced out the window to his left. The engine was now engulfed in flames. Reluctantly, he gave the order to abandon the aircraft.
“We are on fire,” Whitlock said into the intercom. He dispensed with any sort of formal orders. “Everybody out!”
The crew was well drilled in the procedure, but drills were one thing, and reality was another. In a drill, there was no smell of blood and leaking fuel, no crackle of flames or whistle of cold air through the bullet holes in the fuselage. As the pilot, Whitlock would be the last to leave, much as the captain was the last one to abandon a sinking ship. Whitlock wrestled with the controls, trying to keep the plane steady so that the others could evacuate. His stomach lurched as the plane dropped altitude at a sickening pace.
The bombardier and navigator exited through the bomb bay area. The two waist gunners and tail gunner had an escape hatch at the rear of the plane. It would take the ball turret gunner some time to extricate himself from the transparent globe suspended from the belly of the plane. One by one, parachutes bloomed. Whitlock kept count. When he got to eight, meaning that the other crew had evacuated, he unbuckled his safety belt and made his way to the hatch.
He paused for a moment and looked around at the aircraft, which shuddered now as she began to go into her death throes. Goodbye,
Below him, the German countryside reminded him of a green, checkered tablecloth that his mother used to bring on picnics. He gulped, not really wanting to jump. It was a long, long way down, and while he had practiced parachuting, he had never actually jumped.
The plane shivered, and snapped him back to reality. There really wasn’t any other choice.
He leaped.
One of the most dangerous moments in parachuting was getting past the tail structure, which could club a man fatally. Whitlock spun, free falling, and then he was relieved to hear the sound of the chute opening above him. Almost instantaneously, he felt the sharp tug of the parachute itself.
Beneath his dangling feet, he could see enemy territory rushing up at him.
Whitlock found that descending by parachute was both thrilling and terrifying. On the one hand, Whitlock felt glad to have made it out of the doomed plane. He could see it breaking up, leaving a trail of smoke and flame across the blue sky. Other chutes floated down in the distance. Below him, he felt a sense of awe while watching the patchwork quilt of fields getting larger, and then there was a particular field below him.
His heart hammered in his chest because he seemed to be coming in too fast. He hit the ground and rolled, just as he had been trained to do. A few moments later he was back on his feet, assessing how he felt. Aside from a twinge in his ankle, he seemed to have landed unscathed.
He looked around. The sky was devoid of planes or parachutes. He had no idea where the other
Now he was totally alone in enemy territory. He had landed in