by Henry Lewi
Schnapps
The American built B17 Flying
Fortress was alone in the dark sky above France as it flew in a south western
direction, Strasbourg was now far behind them, they’d dropped their payload a
couple of hours earlier.
The four engined plane had been fully rebuilt after a crash landing some
months earlier, following an Allied bombing raid on Hanover. Now fully
operational and crewed by its full complement of 10 men, it steadily flew on; the US built Pratt and Whitney engines working
harmoniously. For the 10-man crew it had
been a long, long, war and by late summer 1944 they were exhausted; they’d flown numerous missions into and out of
Germany and France, and somehow, they’d all survived.
Below them were the flashes of
artillery fire as the Allies tried to advance across Northern France but the Lone
Bomber continued in its south westerly route, hoping to avoid any anti-aircraft
fire. Unexpectedly, below and ahead of them they saw a formation of American B17s
obviously heading home and their plane joined the rear of the flight, giving their call-sign of the 392nd
Bomber Group. Switching radio frequency,
the wireless operator, a farmer’s son from North Dakota, confirmed that they’d
been separated from their group somewhere over Stuttgart. The flight they
joined acknowledged their presence and the Flight Commander in his Bostonian
accent welcomed them to temporary membership of the 41st Bomber
Group ‘Party’, and happy to provide them
with company and an escort home.
Over Clermont-Ferrand they ran into unexpected heavy anti-aircraft fire
and were pounced on by a pack of German Fighters. The flight of B17s broke up,
and to escape the ground fire and fighters the bomber turned due South and was soon
was over Toulouse.
The Lone Bomber continued in its
southerly route, crossing the Pyrenees into Neutral Spain. It had clearly taken a hit as one of the engines
now failed, but with three engines running and adequate fuel, the navigator calculated
they could reach Valencia on the Mediterranean coast of Spain.
As the B17 rolled to a stop in the early dawn
on the runway at Manises Airport just to the west of the city of Valencia, its Luftwaffe
markings could be clearly seen, with the Hakenkreuz or swastika
emblazoned on its tailfin. The 10-man crew climbed down from the aircraft and
drank in the fresh morning air of Spain.
The German Luftwaffe Special Forces men of Kampfgeschwader 200
had finally left the war far, far behind, and the four agents they had dropped
over Northern France would have to fend for themselves. The war was lost anyway, so why worry?
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