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AirBridge.
by Hammond Innes.
NOTE.
In the sections of this book dealing with the Berlin Airlift. I am indebted to the Royal Air Force, who flew me into blockaded Berlin and who gave me every facility for studying the lift both on the ground and in the air. I should like to take this opportunity of expressing my appreciation of the Air Ministry's willingness to a.s.sist me and of the friendly co-operation I received from lift personnel at Wunstorf and Gatow at a time when they were very overworked.
It is inevitable, in a story of this nature, that the types of aircraft and the t.i.tles of air-force personnel should be those that operated at the time and at the bases concerned. I wish to make it clear, therefore, that the story is not founded on anything that actually occurred and, in particular, that the characters in the story who hold official positions are entirely fictional.
CHAPTER ONE.
It was dark and I was very tired. My head ached and my mind was confused. The road ran uphill between steep banks and there were trees with gaunt branches spread against the pale glimmer of the Milky Way. At last I reached the level and the high banks gave place to hedges. Through a gap I caught a glimpse of an orange moon lying on its back on the far side of a ploughed field. Nothing stirred. All life seemed frost-bound in the cold of night. I stood for a moment, exhausted, my knees trembling weakly and the sweat drying like cold steel against my skin. A little wind ran chill fingers through the bare spikes of the quick-thorn and I went on then, driven by the s.h.i.+vers that ran through my body. It was the reaction after the crash. I had to find somewhere to lie up - a barn, anything, so long as it was warm. And then I had to get out of the country. I was meeting the wind now, even as I walked, it chilled the sweat on my body. My steps no longer rang firm. The sound of them became a shuffle that was lost every I now and then in the las.h.i.+ng of the trees in a small copse.
The country around was quite flat now - a familiar flatness. The sharp edges of a large rectangular building stood for a moment black against the moon. It was there for an instant, gaunt and recognisable, and then it was lost behind the high earth mounds of a dispersal point. I stopped, my body suddenly rigid. The dispersal point and that distant glimpse of a hangar confirmed what I had already sensed almost automatically. The flatness that stretched before me was an aerodrome.
If I could get a plane! d.a.m.n it - I'd done it before. And it had been far more difficult then. I could remember the fir trees and the feel of the sand, almost silver in the moonlight, and the dark shadows of men against the hangar lights. The picture was so vivid in my mind that the same surge of excitement took told of me now, tensing my nerves, giving me strength. I turned quickly and slid into the woods.
It was less cold in the woods or else the sudden urgency of hope gave me warmth as well as energy. It was darker, too. I might have lost my sense of direction but always there was Jupiter, like a candle flickering amongst the branches, to show me the way the road had run. The trees clutched at me, whipping across my face, and in a moment I felt the warm trickle of blood from the cut on my forehead. The thick, salt warmth of it reached my tongue as I licked at the corner of my mouth. But it didn't hurt. In fact, I barely noticed it. I was intent upon one thing, and one thing only - a plane.
I came out of the wood on the very edge of the perimeter track, a fifty yard wide ribbon of tarmac, rutted and hillocked by the frosts and marked with the dead stalks of summer's weeds. Left and right it seemed to stretch to the horizon, and across the track was the airfield, a bleak, open hilltop, black under the moon, for the gra.s.s was gone and it was all plough. The curve of that hilltop was smooth and even like the curvature of the earth's surface, a section of a globe hung against the stars. The only relief to that impression of void was away to the left where the black edge of a hangar seemed to be shouldering the moon up the sky.
I stood there for a moment, conscious again of the wind cutting through my clothing as the sense of emptiness drained the excitement out of me. The story of the ploughed-up gra.s.sland, the dead weed stalks and the frost-broken tarmac was evident in the dead atmosphere of the place. The airfield was deserted. It was one of the great bomber stations that had died with the end of the war. It was easy to see it as it had been, full of activity with the roar of planes coming in from a raid big, graceful shapes, in silhouette against the flarepath, settling clumsily on to the runway. This sort of place had been my life for six and a half years. Now the planes only existed as ghosts in my mind. All about me was empty desolation, a slow disintegration moving inevitably back to the land from which it had sprung up.
With a feeling of hopelessness I started along the perimeter track towards the hangars. They would be just derelict sh.e.l.ls, but at least they would give me shelter for the night. I felt suddenly sick and very tired - a little scared, too. The desolation of that airfield ate into me, bringing with it an awareness of my own loneliness.
The perimeter track seemed unending, growing wider and more desolate at every stumbling step as the wind thrust into my stomach till it chilled and stiffened my spine. Dizziness overtook me. It was the crash, of course, and the awful crack I'd got on the head. And then a flicker of hope came to steady me. The hangars now loomed black against the moon, big rectangular skeletons slowly crumbling away. But at the far end of the concrete ap.r.o.n there was one that looked whole and solid. The line of windows along its side was intact and reflected a glimmer of starlight.
I quickened my pace. It was just possible that some private owner, a local farmer or landowner, kept his plane up here on this deserted aerodrome. That was the hope that sent me hurrying across the ap.r.o.n to the deep shadows of the hangars. And as I slid from one hangar to the next I prayed to G.o.d there would be petrol in the tanks.
I was a fool perhaps to build my hopes on such slender foundations as the fact that one hangar was intact. But when you're desperate you clutch at anything. Before I'd even reached the hangar I was already mentally in the c.o.c.kpit of some tiny aircraft winging my way through the night towards France. I knew exactly how the coast would look as it slid beneath me and how the Channel would be gently corrugated at right angles to my line of flight as the waves reflected the slanting rays of the moon. I could see myself checking in at the little hotel in Montmartre where I'd stayed several times before and then after a rest, going to Badouin's office. Badouin would fix it all for me. Everything would be all right as soon as I'd seen Badouin.
I reached the hangar and stood for a moment in the shadow of its bulk. I was panting. But I no longer felt sick or dizzy. I was trembling slightly, but that was just nerves. I had plenty of energy. Nothing could stop me now. I slid round the corner of the building and along the face of the huge sliding doors.
My luck was in, for the little wicket door in the centre yielded to the touch of my hand, revealing a dark void full of vague shadows. I stepped inside and closed the door. It was still and very cold with that queer musty smell of damp on concrete. Some glimmer of moonlight seemed to penetrate into the rear of the hangar, for the shadows resolved themselves into the nose and wings of a large four-engined plane. It was facing me head-on and it seemed enormous in the gloom of the hangar.
The incredible luck of it! I ducked under the port wing and moved along the fuselage, running my hand along the cold metal of it, searching for the door.
'So. His work is not to be remembered.'
I stopped with a jerk. It was a girl's voice that had spoken.
A man answered her: 'I'm sorry. War is a dirty business.'
'But the war is finished.'
'Yes, but you lost it, remember.'
'And because Germany loses a war, my father must suffer? My father has suffered enough, I think.'
'Your father is dead.' The brutal words were said in a hard, matter-of-fact voice.
A silence followed. Peering over the tailplane I could see the outline of two figures against the steady glow of a pressure lamp. The man was short, thick-set and powerful-looking and as he moved towards the girl he unmasked the lamp so that its dim light showed me the litter of a workbench running the width of the hangar and the dark shadow of a belt-driven machine lathe.
I turned quickly. The lamplight was glowing on the metal of the plane and as I slid along the fuselage towards the door I saw that it was a Tudor and its inboard engine was missing.
If I had gained the door unnoticed I should not now be setting down what must surely be the most extraordinary story of the Berlin Airlift. But my foot caught against some sc.r.a.p metal and with the sudden clang of sheet tin I froze.
'Who's that?' It was the man's voice and it had the drive of a man accustomed to absolute authority. 'So you've got friends here, have you?' The beam of a torch swept the plane and then spotlighted me with its dazzling light. 'Who are you? What do you want?'
I just stood there, blinking in the glare, incapable of movement, panic lifting my heart into my mouth.
The torch moved suddenly. There was a click by the wall and the sound of an engine starting up outside. Then lights glowed and brightened.
The man was facing me across the tail of the plane now and he had a gun in his hand. He wasn't tall, but he was immensely broad across the shoulders. He was thick through like a bull and he held his head slightly forward as though about to charge. I hardly noticed the girl.
'Well, who are you?' the man repeated and began to move in on me. He came slowly and inevitably like a man sure of his ability to handle a situation.
I broke and ran. I wasn't going to be caught like this, trapped in a hangar, accused of attempting to steal an aircraft as well as a car. If once I could get to the shelter of the woods I'd still have a chance. I ducked under the wings with the sound of his feet pounding on the concrete behind me. As I wrenched open the door of the hangar he shouted at me in German: 'Halt! Halt, Du Verruckter!' That d.a.m.ned language with its memory of endless, unbearable days of prison and the nagging fear of the escape gave me a last burst of energy.
I shot through the door and in a moment I was out on the perimeter track racing for the dark line of the woods. I crossed the concrete of the runway-end, my breath a wild hammering in my throat. My mind had become confused so that I seemed to be running again from the tunnel mouth to the dark anonymity of the fir woods. At any moment I expected to hear the deep bay of the dogs and my skin crawled between my shoulder blades just as it had done that night in Germany so long ago, cringing in antic.i.p.ation of the shattering impact of a bullet. The concrete was broken and matted with weeds. Then I was on plough with the clay clinging to my shoes and the sound of my flight deadened in the sticky earth.
I stumbled and clawed my way to the woods. I heard my pursuer crash into the undergrowth close behind me. Branches whipped across my face. I barely noticed them. I found a path and then lost it again in a tangle of briar that tore at my clothes. I fought my way through it to find that he'd skirted the brambles and was level with me. I started to double back, but the undergrowth was too thick. I turned and faced him then.
I didn't stop to think. I went straight for him. G.o.d knows what I intended to do. I think I meant to kill him. He had shouted at me in German and my mind had slipped back to that earlier time when I had been nearly hunted down. His fist struck my arm with numbing force and I closed with him, my fingers searching for his windpipe. I felt the k.n.o.bbly point of his Adam's apple against the ball of my thumb, heard him choke as I squeezed. Then his knee came up and I screamed in agony. My hands lost their grip and as I doubled up I saw him draw his fist back. I knew what was coming and I was powerless to stop it. His fist seemed huge in a shaft of moonlight and then it shattered into a thousand fragments as it broke against my jaw.
What followed is very confused in my mind. I have a vague memory of being half-led, half-carried over ground that seemed to rise and fall in waves. Then I was lying on a camp bed in an office full of bright lights. I was being interrogated, first in German, then in English. There was only one person there the man who had hit me. I didn't see any sign of the girl. He sat in a chair, leaning over me so that his big, solid head seemed hung in s.p.a.ce, always on the verge of falling on me and crus.h.i.+ng me. I tried to move, but my hands and feet were bound. The light was above me and to the left. It was very bright and hurt my eyes. My jaw ached and my head throbbed and the interrogation went on and on through periods of black-out. I remember coming round once with a cry of pain as the searing burn of disinfectant entered the wound on my forehead. After that I slept.
When I woke it was daylight. I lay staring at the ceiling and wondering why it was plain, untreated concrete. The walls were bare brick. In the opposite corner the mortar had crumbled away and there was a long, jagged crack stuffed with newspaper. Slowly the events of the night before came back to me the airfield, the hangar, the struggle in the woods.
I sat up with a jerk that sent a stab of pain shooting through my head. My jaw was painful and slightly swollen, the cut on my forehead was covered with lint secured by adhesive tape. There was a patch of dried blood on the grey Army blanket that had been pulled over me. I swung my legs out of bed and then sat there for quite a while staring at the unfamiliar room and fingering my jaw.
It was quite a small room and had obviously been used as an office. There was a cheap desk with a portable typewriter in its case, an old swivel chair, a steel filing cabinet and an untidy litter of books and papers. The books, I saw at a glance, were all technical manuals - engineering, mechanics, aviation. They were thick with dust. The floor was of bare boards and a rusty stove stood against one wall, the chimney running out through a roughly-patched hole in the ceiling. The windows were barred and looked out on to a pile of rubble and a vista of broken brick foundations, half-covered with dead sorrel stalks. There was an air of disintegration about the place. My gaze focused and held on the bars of the windows. They were solid iron bars set in cement. I turned quickly to the door with a feeling of being trapped. It was locked. I tried to find my shoes, but they had been removed. Panic seized hold of me then and I stood quite still in the middle of the room in my stockinged feet and fought it down.
I got control of myself at last, but I was overcome with a feeling of sickness and lay down on the bed. After a time the sickness pa.s.sed and my brain became active again. I was in a h.e.l.l of a spot! Oh, I was being quite honest with myself then. I knew I'd tried to kill a man. I could remember the feel of his windpipe against my thumb. The question was, did he know that I'd meant to kill him?
I looked slowly round the room. The iron bars, the locked door, the removal of my shoes - he knew all right.
My hand groped automatically for my cigarette-case. My jacket hung over the back of a chair and as I felt for the case, my fingers touched the inside breast pocket. It was empty. My wallet was gone.
I found the case and lit a cigarette. And then I leaned back. That wallet had contained something more important than money - it had contained my pilot's certificate and my false ident.i.ty. h.e.l.l! He'd only to read the papers ... I dragged at my cigarette, trying to think through the throbbing ache of my head. I had to get out of here. But how? How? My eyes roved desperately over the room. Then I glanced at my watch. It was eight-fifteen. Probably the papers had arrived already. In any case he would have phoned the police.
A door slammed somewhere beyond the brickwork of the walls. I sat up, listening for the sound of footsteps. All I could hear was the beating of my heart and the buzzing of a fly trapped in a web at the corner of the window. n.o.body came. Time pa.s.sed slowly. Occasionally I heard the sound of movement somewhere in the depths of the building. At eight thirty-five a car drew up at the back. There was the slam of a door and the sound of voices. Five minutes later the car drove off.
I couldn't stand it any more. The feeling of impotence was getting on my nerves. In a sudden mood of anger I got up and beat on the panels of the door.
Footsteps approached, a heavy, solid tread, boots ringing metallic on concrete. Then a voice asked, 'Are you awake?'
'Of course I'm awake,' I replied angrily. 'Do you mind opening the door?'
There was a moment's pause and then the voice said, 'That depends. I'm a bit cautious after last night. You d.a.m.n nearly throttled me.'
I didn't say anything and a moment later the key turned in the lock and he opened the door. It was the same man all right - short and broad and very solid. He had thick dark hair slightly grizzled at the temples and a wide jaw that seemed to compress his lips into a thin, determined line. He was dressed in oil-stiff overalls and the silk scarf round his neck didn't entirely hide the livid marks left by my fingers.
'I'm sorry - about last night,' I murmured.
He didn't come in, but stood there in the gap of the doorway, his legs slightly straddled, staring at me. He had hard, slate-grey eyes. 'Forget it.' His voice was more friendly than his eyes. 'Have you had a look at yourself in the mirror? Afraid I made a bit of a mess of your jaw.'
There was an awkward silence. Somehow I couldn't bring myself to ask when the police would arrive. 'I'd like to get cleaned up,' I said.
He nodded. 'Down the pa.s.sage.' He stood aside to let me pa.s.s. But though he didn't seem angry, I noticed he took good care to keep well out of my reach.
Outside I found myself in a brick pa.s.sageway filled with sunlight. An open doorway showed the woods crowding right up to the side of the building and through the lacework of the trees I caught a glimpse of the flat, bare expanse of the airfield. It all looked very quiet and peaceful. Through that door lay freedom and as though he read my thoughts, he said, 'I shouldn't try wandering about outside, Eraser. The police are searching this area.'
'The police?' I swung round, staring at him, trying to understand the sense behind his words.
'They've found the car. You'd crashed it about halfway down Baydon Hill.' He glanced up at my forehead. 'I did the best I could with the cut. You've probably scarred yourself for life, but I don't think any dirt has got into it.'
I didn't understand his att.i.tude. 'When are the police coining for me?' I asked.
'We'll discuss that later,' he said. 'Better get cleaned up first. The lavatory is at the end there.'
Feeling dull and rather dazed I went on down the pa.s.sage. I could hear him following behind me. Then his footsteps stopped. 'I've left my shaving kit out for you. If there's anything you want, shout.' And then he added, 'I'm just knocking up some breakfast. How many eggs would you like - two?'
'If you can spare them,' I mumbled. I was too astonished at the calmness of his att.i.tude to say anything else.
'Oh, I'm all right for eggs. A girl brings them from the farm each day with the milk.' A door opened on the sound of sizzling fat and then closed. I turned to find myself alone in the pa.s.sage. Freedom beckoned through the sunlit doorway at the end. But it was hopeless. He wouldn't have left me alone like that if he hadn't known it was hopeless. I turned quickly and padded down the corridor in my stockinged feet.
The lavatory was small with an open window looking out on to a tangle of briar. It was a reminder of service quarters with its cracked basin, broken utility seat and initials and other pencil scratchings still visible on the crumbling plaster. A shaving kit had been left out for me and a towel. Hung on a nail on the window frame was a cracked mirror. I stared at myself in the pock-marked surface. I wasn't a particularly pleasant sight. Apart from the black stubble that I'd met every day for at least fifteen years, the side of my jaw was puffed and swollen, producing a queer variation of colour from red to dark purple and culminating in an ugly split of dried blood. My eyes were sunk back in dark sockets of exhaustion, the whites bloodshot and wild-looking, and to cap it all was a broad strip of adhesive tape running right across the right side of my forehead.
'You b.l.o.o.d.y fool,' I said aloud. It was like talking to a stranger, except that the lips of the face in the gla.s.s moved in echo of my words. I almost laughed at the thought that I'd wanted to try and escape into the outside world looking like that.
I looked better after I'd shaved - but not much better. I'd had to leave the stubble round the swollen side of my jaw and it gave me a queer, lop-sided appearance. The cold water had freshened me up a bit, but the dark shadows round my eyes remained and there was still the adhesive tape across my forehead.
'Breakfast's ready.'
I turned to find him standing in the doorway. He nodded for me to go ahead and at the same time stepped slightly back. 'You're taking no chances,' I said. The bitterness in my voice was for myself, not for him.
'Last door on the right,' he said as though I hadn't spoken.
Inside was a trestle table, the sort we'd had in forward bases. Two plates heaped with bacon and eggs and fried bread steamed slowly and there was a pot of tea. 'By the way, my name's Saeton. Bill Saeton.'
'I gather - you know my name.' My voice trembled slightly. He was standing just inside the door, solid and immovable like a rock, his eyes fixed on my face. The personality of the man seemed to grow in silence, dominating me and filling the room.
'Yes, I think I know all about you,' he said slowly. 'Sit down.'
His voice was remote, impersonal. I didn't want to sit down. I wanted my shoes and my wallet. I wanted to get out of there. But I sat down all the same. There was something compelling about the way he stood there, staring at me. 'Can I have my wallet, please?'
'Later,' was all he said. He sat down opposite me, his back to the window, and poured the tea. I drank thirstily and then lit a cigarette.
'I thought you said you could manage two eggs.'
'I'm not hungry,' I answered, drawing the smoke deep down into my lungs. It soothed me, easing the tension of my nerves. 'When are they coming for me?' I asked. I had control of my voice now.
He frowned. 'Who?' he asked, his mouth crammed full.
'The police,' I said impatiently. 'You've phoned them, haven't you?'
'Not yet.' He pointed his fork at my plate. 'For G.o.d's sake relax and get some breakfast inside you.'
I stared at him. 'You mean they don't know I'm here?' I didn't believe him. n.o.body would calmly sit down to eat his breakfast with a man who'd tried to throttle him the night before unless he knew the authorities were on their way. Then I remembered the car and the way he'd advised me not to wander about outside. 'The police were here about half an hour ago, weren't they?' I asked him.
For an answer he reached over to a side table and tossed me the morning paper. I glanced down at it. The story was there in bold headlines that ran half-across the front page: PALESTINE FLIGHT FOILED - Police Prevent Another Plane Leaving Country Illegally -Mystery of 'Mr Callahan'. It was all there in the opening paragraph of leaded type - the whole wretched story.
I pushed the paper away and said, 'Why didn't you hand me over?' I spoke without looking up. I had a peculiar sense of being trapped.
'We'll talk about that later,' he said again.
He spoke as though he were talking to a child and suddenly anger came to bolster my courage. What was he doing living alone up here on this deserted aerodrome tinkering about with a Tudor in the dead of night? Why hadn't he rung the police? He was playing some sort of cat-and-mouse game with me and I wanted to get it over. If it had to come, let it come now, right away. 'I want you to call the police,' I said.
'Don't be a fool! Get some breakfast inside you. You'll feel better then.'
But I'd got to my feet. 'I want to give myself up.' My voice trembled. It was part anger, part fear. There was something wrong with this place. I didn't like it. I didn't like the uncertainty of it. I wanted to get it over.
'Sit down!' He, too, had risen and his hand was on my shoulder, pressing me down. 'Nervous reaction, that's all.'
'There's nothing wrong with my nerves.' I shook his hand off and then I was looking into his eyes and somehow I found myself back in my seat, staring at my plate.
'That's better.'
'What are you keeping me here for?' I murmured. "What are you doing up here?'
'We'll talk about it after breakfast.'
'I want to talk about it now.'
'After breakfast,' he repeated.