Part 4 (1/2)

”I worried, as any wife would,” Eleanor said three decades later. ”I would feel a stab of fear whenever someone knocked at the door or the telephone rang. The first thing I would do when I got a letter from George was to scan through it for a number - the number of missions completed. That was the first thing I wanted to know. Then I'd go back to read the letter.”20 On December 16, radio operator Sgt. Mel TenHaken flew his first mission, against a refinery at Brux, Czechoslovakia. Because the crew were new, the pilot, Lieutenant Cord, was a veteran of thirty-one missions. TenHaken's regular pilot flew as co-pilot that day. There was another newcomer, a photographer on his seventeenth mission. Theirs would be one of the last two planes on the bomb run and his photos would be among the official records of the raid's effect. When the group formed up and headed toward the target, Ten-Haken saw ”a seemingly endless line of planes. I had never seen this many in one place at one time.” He thought that ”obviously Rosie the riveter back home had been very busy.” The bombers were at 25,000 feet, just below the 26,000-foot ceiling for the craft.

On his B-24, TenHaken was in charge of the chaff, what he had called ”Christmas tree tinsel” back home. Its purpose was to confuse German radar, which otherwise would lock on to the group and know 68 what alt.i.tude to set the fuses for the sh.e.l.ls to explode. The chaff was in packets, each one wrapped and tied with a plain brown band, each one crimped to open in the wind and allow the foil to drift down in individual pieces. Most veterans thought the chaff didn't do much if any good, but they tossed it out of the plane with great gusto anyway. When his plane got to the initial point and turned, then straightened for the bomb run, TenHaken saw ”numerous little puffs ahead forming a black cloud shaped like an elongated shoe box.” The leader of his squadron was flying through it. Those behind were about to enter the German box. It was time to pull the flak jackets on. These were for the crew, whose members did not have the cast iron protection the pilot and co-pilot did. The jackets consisted of irregularly shaped metal plates st.i.tched between two sheets of canvas to form a vest. To TenHaken, ”their purpose seemed primitive, identical to that of suits of armor.” They weighed about twenty pounds each. Most veterans decided early on not to wear them, but to put them between their seats and their b.u.t.ts, thus protecting the most important part.

Over the target, with flak bursting from the sh.e.l.ls all around his plane, TenHaken started dropping the chaff packets through one of the waist windows. After dropping one, he tried to count to ten as he had been told before letting the next one go, but in the midst of the flak he seldom got past two or three. Then the plane to his right got hit. ”A flak explosion at its number three engine had blown the right wing from the body. The scene was incomprehensible - the wing tumbled over and down, and the fuselage was nosing into a dive.” There were no parachutes. ”The bam-bam-bams and poof-poofpoofs were exploding everywhere; it was inconceivable to fly through this unscathed.” The bomber lurched. Have we been hit? TenHaken wondered. Through the intercom, he heard the bombardier say, ”Bombs away.”

(”The most beautiful words in the English language,” according to one pilot.) Then the bombardier continued, ”Now let's get the h.e.l.l out of here.” After a pause, he came on the intercom again to say, ”I wasn't supposed to add that last part.” Lieutenant Cord banked the plane into a steep dive to the right.

TenHaken thought, Thank you, G.o.d. Cord came on the intercom to ask each crew member to report any damage. None. When they were out of the flak, TenHaken lifted his oxygen mask and shouted above the engine noise to the photographer, ”You've been through seventeen of these now. Was this flak typical, lighter, worse, or what?” The photographer grinned and shouted back, ”It wasn't light. Each mission seems to get worse, but I can't believe they could get more up here than they did.” Over the intercom, Cord asked, ”Flight engineer back there?” He wanted to know what the trouble was with the gas gauges. Number three engine sputtered and quit. ”Get something to three,” Cord ordered.

”I'm trying,” the engineer answered. ”I'm trying.” Cord realized what had happened. On the intercom he said, ”The b.a.s.t.a.r.ds. .h.i.t our gas lines over the target. They've just vibrated loose.” The number two engine quit. The engineer repeated that he was trying to transfer the gasoline flow. He could not.

”We're losing alt.i.tude and control,” Cord yelled. ”We're at sixteen thousand; a couple seconds back, we were at eighteen.” He added, ”Stand by to bail if necessary.”

Then number four engine quit. Then number one. There was a long moment of quiet, only the sound of the wind that buffeted the plane about in the glide. Then ”the terrible clanging of the bail-out bell crashed the quiet.” Everyone got out okay, landed safely, and became POWs.21 For TenHaken, the co-pilot, and the rest of the crew, it was their first mission. It was number thirty-two for Lieutenant Cord. For the photographer, number seventeen. For all of them, it was the last.

”Anon” made up words to sing to the tune of ”As Time Goes By”: You must remember this The flak can't always miss 69 Somebody's gotta die.

The odds are always too d.a.m.ned high As flak goes by . . .

It's still the same old story The Eighth gets all the glory While we're the ones who die.

The odds are always too d.a.m.ned high As flak goes by.22 Once in the fall of 1944 McGovern went up in a practice run, with only his co-pilot, Bill Rounds, and his navigator, Sam Adams, along. McGovern was upset with Rounds because while McGovern was flying co-pilot with Surbeck, Rounds used his free time to go into Cerignola to find a girl. He contracted VD and had to be treated with sulfa powder. McGovern was about ready to kick him off the plane. But on this practice mission, which was done primarily to give the co-pilots who had not yet been flying some experience, Rounds did most of the flying. ”He took that plane as if he'd been doing this all his life,”

McGovern said. ”I think I could've done as well, but I couldn't have done any better and I had a lot of practice.” Rounds just tucked into position and held it there. That night, the pilot of the lead plane, a captain, came to McGovern in the officers club to say, ”You know, George, you've got one h.e.l.l of a valuable co-pilot. He flies the best formation of any co-pilot I've seen. That guy is tremendous - you better hold on to him with both hands.” Right then, McGovern decided to forget about Rounds's VD. He figured he had better let the man do what he wanted on his off hours.

Lt. Donald Currier was a part of one of the first B-24 squadrons of the Fifteenth Air Force to arrive in Italy and thus flew his first mission in January 1944, one of the first of his group. It was two days after his squadron had arrived in Italy. The target was the railroad yards in Perugia, just off the Tiber River, in support of the ground troops. But when the bombers arrived, it was snowing. Landmarks were obscured. The lead navigator, having no radar (which only came nine months later), was unable to see anything but clouds. Currier was the navigator flying in the B-24 on the wing of the lead plane. ”I looked desperately for something I could see and recognize,” he recalled, but he saw nothing.

The lead plane opened its bomb bays. The bombardier in Currier's plane followed the leader. He put his finger on the toggle switch. When the leader dropped his bombs, he and the other bombardiers did the same. Currier saw the bombs fall in open countryside. He saw some bursts of flak on one side and far away and thought, I don't know why the Germans bothered. We certainly didn't do them any harm. He and the pilot and crew resolved ”we would go again and again until we got it right.”

Currier would go on to make a career in the Air Force. Looking back four decades, he said that in his experience ”it seems incredible that we would be flying a combat mission with so little training or experience.” But that was how badly the Fifteenth needed pilots and crews in January 1944.23 It was because of that need that the AAF inst.i.tuted the policy of requiring just-arrived pilots to fly as co-pilots for five missions before taking up their own plane and crew, since the men had gone through the speeded-up training program in 1944. In 1945 the commanders changed policy again, putting new pilots and their crews into action as soon as they arrived in Italy. And it was the casualty list that forced the commanders of the bomb groups to keep demanding more replacements. Bombardier Lt. Donald Kay 70 arrived in Italy in May 1944 and was a.s.signed to the 783rd Squadron, 465th Bomb Group. Of the three cla.s.smates in bombardier school who came over with Kay and were close friends, two were killed in the air and the other became a POW. Overall, Kay recalled that of the seventeen original crews that started the war with him, only six finished.24 Sgt. Anthony Picardi of the 455th Bomb Group's 742nd Squadron (who had visited his family's village and met his grandmother) saw a B-24 crash on the runway while trying to take off for a mission. It blew up on impact. Nine of the ten crew members were blown to bits.

But one had ”his arms blown off from the elbow down and his legs blown off from the knees down. He was actually crawling away from the inferno. He was digging into the dirt with the stubs of his elbows, trying to survive. Right then and there, I realized just how precious life is.

He crawled right up to us, looked us straight in the eyes, and then closed his eyes forever.”25 For McGovern, on his first five missions as Surbeck's co-pilot, things were not so rough. He saw some flak, went through it, and got out of it safely. The B-24 did not take one hit. ”I felt rather secure after flying those missions,”

McGovern said. He summed up what he had learned from observing Surbeck: ”I heard through the earphones how he handled the radio transmissions to the tower and to the lead plane. I saw how he brought the plane into formation, how slowly or swiftly he got that done, I watched him to see what he was looking at and listened to the way he was handling the crew - everything he said, I could hear through my earphones. . . . I saw how he flew formation in various positions, on the left side one day and the next he might be in the middle, the next day on the right wing. I could observe all those things without having the responsibility of handling the plane myself. I picked up a lot of touches.” This was not practice flying in Idaho. This was Europe and the formation was much bigger - sometimes 500 or 600 planes. After completing his five missions as Surbeck's co-pilot, McGovern said, ”I felt comfortable to take that plane up with my own crew and get it into formation and get off on a combat mission.”26

CHAPTER SEVEN - December 1944.

71 THE LIBERATORS IN ITALY had a distinctive name, usually a.s.signed by the pilot, often after consultation with the crew, painted below and slightly to the front of the flight deck. Many had nose art, some of it quite good, much of it showing scantily dressed, buxom, and gorgeous girls. Frequently, however, the name was the pilot's hometown or home state or the name of his mother or wife. When the pilot and crew completed their missions and went home, the men who inherited the aircraft would sometimes change the name, but that was generally considered to bring on bad luck.

McGovern and his crew came over by s.h.i.+p and were a.s.signed planes on a ”ready-to-go” basis, usually a different plane for almost each mission. Most of them already had a name and nose art. McGovern dubbed any plane he flew the Dakota Queen, but never painted it on the side. He picked the name to honor Eleanor. That way, he said, ”we got double good luck - the name of the plane that was painted on there and a plane named for Eleanor.” He had a picture of her he would put on the console. The plane's painted name might be Yo-Yo, or whatever, but to McGovern and his crew it was Dakota Queen. The idea may have come from a saying popular with the pilots and crew at the airfield. Planes that had been in combat, as nearly all of them had, often had to be patched up by the ground crews. The B-24s that had been badly mauled and repaired and then p.r.o.nounced ready to fly were called, derisively, ”hangar queens.”1 The ground crews that did the repairs were superb. Sometimes they would work right through the night, if necessary, using a crane to put in a new engine, patching up the flak holes in the wings and fuselage, adjusting the instruments, loading in the bombs, fresh oxygen tanks, .50 caliber ammunition boxes, and other equipment. Each plane had its own ground crew. Most of the members had been mechanics before they joined the AAF. They loved the plane they worked on and watched for it as the group returned to base. It wasn't only the pilot and crew they were concerned about; it was the plane as well. Those ground crews, in McGovern's words, ”were well trained and well motivated. We couldn't have kept anything as complicated as a Liberator functioning very long without their superb attention.”2 Lt. Henry Burkle, in command of the ground crews, recalled that they would line up beside the runway ”waiting for their airplane to come in and hoping that it came back and be there to meet the flight crew and ask them all about the flight in order to find out what maintenance had to be done.” Burkle had a crew chief for each plane. Each crew chief had three mechanics under him. ”Then I had three flight chiefs, they were master sergeants, each with three flights under him. Then I had a line chief, big old fellow from Campbell, Nebraska, named Al Haggaman. He was a dandy. A big old slow farm boy, but he was sincere and he knew his work, knew his business.” Each evening, Burkle would find out ”how many airplanes the commanders wanted the next day. And about ten out of every ten days they wanted every airplane that could fly put in the air. It was always maximum effort. We didn't know what sleep was.”3 B-24 pilot Vincent f.a.gan of the 450th Bomb Group recalled that he ”never went out to the flight line at any hour of the day or night that the mechanics were not out there working. These mechanics were the most dedicated people I ever saw. They'd break down and cry when their plane went down. It always seemed they thought there was something else they could have done to make the plane more airworthy.”4 There was one other thing that many ground crews did. They could purchase six or seven bottles of beer a week, but there was no ice or refrigeration available. So some of the crews would slip their beer aboard the B-24s just before they took off on a combat mission. Flying at 20,000 feet of elevation for six to eight hours would cool the beer. The crews were always anxious for the safe arrival of their planes to Cerignola. The pilots would accuse them of being more anxious to see that their beer was safe than that the pilot and his crew were. Pilots were called aircraft commanders. Like captains on a s.h.i.+p, their word was law. The sergeants called McGovern ”lieutenant” or ”sir” whether on the ground or in the air. But not Rounds, who was called ”Bill.” Lieutenants Rounds and Adams called their pilot ”Mac,” but just as the enlisted men they knew perfectly well who was the captain. McGovern called 72 everyone by his first name. On the a.s.signment sheet, the crew was referred to by the pilot's name; thus it would state, ”McGovern's going to be flying number three today.” Never ”McGovern's crew.”

On December 6, McGovern prepared to fly his first mission as pilot with his own crew. The target was the marshaling yards at Graz, Austria. He was ”desperately eager to do everything right the first time out alone.” He confessed that ”I was probably more nervous on that takeoff than any other missions that I flew during the war.” He was thinking about how he was going to get that big bird off the ground without Howard Surbeck there. It was by far the heaviest B-24 he had flown, what with the bomb load, a full crew, all that gasoline, the machine gun belts, the oxygen tanks, and more. This was not a stateside aircraft - it weighed 70,000 pounds, thirty-five tons. McGovern later said, ”I don't think any pilot in World War II ever made a takeoff in a B-24 that didn't scare him.”5 On his first mission Lieutenant f.a.gan talked to his crew chief about the load. The chief said, ”As far as the total weight is concerned, you may as well know that these 24's are overloaded about eight thousand pounds. Consolidated Aircraft says maximum takeoff weight is 63,000 pounds. ”If you don't like it, what do you want to leave behind? Machine gun ammunition? The flak suits? Take less gasoline? Or what? You're going to have to take the bombs or there is no point in going.”6 McGovern found taxiing a B-24 a challenge. The taxi strips were just packed clay and dirt. He could not steer the B-24 with the nose wheel, over which he had no control. He would steer with the propellers - if he wanted to turn right he would cut back on the props on that side, speed them up on the left. The taxi strip was narrow and had a ditch on each side.

The engineer, Sgt. Mike Valko, would stand behind the flight deck, open the overhead hatch, and put part of his body out of the plane to see if McGovern was getting too close on one side or the other (the pilot could not see the ditches from the c.o.c.kpit). Valko would call out, ”Too close on the right.” Or he would say, ”A little bit left,” or ”Right, right, right I said.”

Once on the runway, with three or four aircraft ahead of him waiting to take off, McGovern set the brakes and revved up the engines. Rounds went through the checklist with him. When that was complete and the plane in front had started down the runway, McGovern released the brakes. Beside him, he could hear Rounds praying. ”Every takeoff I made in World War II was an adventure,” McGovern later admitted. A B-24 did not take off like a fighter. It started rolling slowly, only reluctantly picking up speed. He felt ”this thing is never going to get enough speed to get off the ground - there's just no way I'm going to make it.” The runway was too short - by later standards it was unsafe - but just at the end of it, now up to 160 mph, McGovern pulled his plane up into the air. He was just skimming the ground. He told Rounds, ”Wheels up.” Rounds. .h.i.t the switch and up they came, making for more speed and climbing ability. But McGovern didn't dare pull it up any faster for fear of stalling and cras.h.i.+ng, something that happened on occasion. ”It seemed forever before I could climb.” For over a mile he was at treetop height. He did not dare keep the engines on full throttle because that would use up too much fuel, which would be needed later. ”Wing flaps up,” he told Rounds, and when that was done the plane had more speed and less drag. Finally, mercifully, he started to climb. The rallying point was over the Adriatic.

Once over the water, McGovern had the gunners test their machine guns. He got the plane up, spotted the lead plane, slid into formation, wingtip to wingtip, almost touching, close enough so that a fighter plane couldn't dive between them. That took almost an hour. Then the formation headed on to Graz (in southeastern Austria), over the Alps. On the way up to 20,000 feet theDakota Queen pa.s.sed through clouds. For McGovern, on this and later missions, the weather gave him more worry than the possibility of heavy flak. If there had been a contest between weather and flak, ”in the amount of shear sweat and fear that it produced, the weather won.” Once over the continent, the clouds gave way to blue sky. ”You could look right down into those little villages.”

Rounds checked the instruments. So did McGovern. Every five minutes or so, he would press the b.u.t.ton on his intercom and ask each crew member if everything was okay. When he needed specific information, he would ask. ”Sam,” he would say to the navigator, ”what is that formation off our right wing?” Or, ”Tell me our location, Sam.” Or, to Sergeant Higgins, the radioman, ”Have you picked up 73 anything on the weather ahead?”

Rounds was all business. No jokes, no naps, no pranks. He was coordinated and an athlete and wanted to be flying his own fighter aircraft, but he was, in McGovern's view, almost a perfect co-pilot. Not that he had a lot to do. McGovern said he was there as a ”standby. It was like being vice president of the United States. He was there in case of trouble only.” They had no conversation other than ”watch engine number one” or something about the other planes in the formation or the readings on various instruments.

On this first flight, McGovern did all the flying. Rounds, then and later, when he was free from concern, would read a Bible. McGovern thought that a bit much, given Rounds's proclivities, but sometimes would be startled when Rounds would say, ”Mac, listen to this” and read something from one of the Psalms.

”d.a.m.n, that's good,” he would exclaim.

When the formation got to Graz the weather had closed in. Nothing but clouds. The lead plane turned away. The lead pilot did not get on the radio to say he was taking the others back - they simply turned when he did. Over the Adriatic on the way home he jettisoned his bomb load, as did the other planes.

For everyone involved it was a milk run - no fighters, no flak. Because they had crossed into enemy territory, however, everyone got a mission to his credit. Back at Cerignola the weather was clear.

McGovern told Rounds to put the wheels down. A light came on to tell him the wheels were down and fully locked. He checked to make sure his ball turret gunner was inside the airplane and his turret pulled up. He put the wing flaps down to 40 degrees. Rounds called out the airspeed - ”We're at 170 . . . 160 .

. . 150 . . . 140.” McGovern eased back on the throttles. The plane was almost gliding. It was a good landing. When he pulled the plane onto its hard stand, the crew got out all singing and whistling.

McGovern walked around the plane, something he did before and after every mission. Everything was fine.7 For this mission, McGovern was paid $9.70. He was earning $290 per month, including his overseas pay and flying pay.8 He sent $200 of that home to Eleanor each month.

After debriefing, on his way to the officers club, he stopped by the enlisted men's tent to see how they were doing. They were already celebrating. McGovern and Rounds had a beer or two in the club to celebrate their first mission. No holes in the plane, no wounded crew, no danger, but credit for a full mission. Wonderful.

Sgt. Eddie Picardo, a tail gunner on a B-24, later said that he did not know how to explain ”the enormous feeling of relief that accompanies returning safe from a bombing mission. . . . Once on the ground, you started to live for the future again and plan what you might do once the war was finally over.

. . . I've never had a feeling to compare with it.”9 After the mission on December 6, the weather closed in. Most days the a.s.signment sheet had McGovern flying in the morning, but in the morning the clouds were too thick over the base, over the Alps, over the targets, and the mission was scratched. The tension and anxiety, the tossing and turning on the cots, had been for nothing. This was typical. One B-24 pilot, Lt. Walter Hughes, was wakened and briefed eighty-six times to achieve his thirty-five missions.10 None of these pilots or their crews were ever ordered to go on a mission. When they saw their names on the a.s.signment sheet, they knew that they could back off by just saying no, I won't do that. They were always asked. McGovern never said no, ”and I don't know anybody that turned one down.” On December 4, McGovern's father died of a heart attack while he was pheasant hunting. Cables took what seemed forever in World War II, and it was not until December 14 that one reporting on the death arrived at the base. The intelligence officer took it to McGovern. The chaplain prayed with him, then said he could be exempted from flying the next day. McGovern said no, he would not take that excuse.

On December 15, the target was the railroad yards in Linz, Austria. At the briefing, the pilots and crews were told that the Red Army was on the move, that the Germans were going through Linz as they ran equipment to the eastern front, that they were also moving other troops and weapons to the western front through Linz, and thus the target was critical. So off they went. It was at Linz on this, their second 74 mission, that McGovern said ”we got introduced to combat.” The flak was heavy. Up to that point, McGovern had thought that exploding flak ”looked like firecrackers and rockets going off.” He learned better when a big slug of flak ”came through the winds.h.i.+eld, high and to my right. It hit just above my right shoulder and to the right of my head, and then fell down onto the floor between Rounds and me.”

They looked down at it. Rounds looked over to McGovern and just shook his head. McGovern did the same. The shrapnel was ”the angriest-looking piece of metal, just jagged on every edge and big enough to tear your head off if it had hit a few inches to the left or maybe a few more inches on Bill Rounds's side.” It was freezing at 25,000 feet, probably 50 degrees below zero Fahrenheit, and the cold rush of wind - despite all the sheepskin-lined jackets and pants they had on, and despite their electrically heated suits - was ferocious. McGovern managed to keep his plane in formation, but barely. ”All I could do was just sit there and do my job,” he said. He hoped no more shrapnel would hit theDakota Queen. Two or three other pieces did, but no one was hurt. McGovern got back to the base and made his landing ”smooth as gla.s.s.” The men did not jump out and kiss the ground, but they were happy and rea.s.sured.

He had done it twice. That night they talked about their lieutenant and how good he was. Other crews said their pilots ”just bang us in.” From then on, McGovern said, ”They treated me around that airplane almost with reverence.” They had developed, already, total confidence in their pilot. ”Their lives were in my hands,” McGovern explained. ”It wasn't just that they thought they were. A mistake on my part and we're all dead.”

December 16 was a cloudy, cold day all across Europe, but the 741st and the rest of the Fifteenth Air Force flew anyway. It was the day the Germans took advantage of the weather to counterattack in the Ardennes, launching the Battle of the Bulge. The target for McGovern and the others was the oil refineries in Brux, Czechoslovakia.

One B-24 broke its landing gear on takeoff. It jettisoned its bombs in the Adriatic, then crash-landed at the Gioia, Italy, airfield. Another bomber had engine trouble and had to return to Cerignola.

McGovern got theDakota Queen into formation in a broken cloud cover, but ”all of a sudden everything just goes blank.” The formation had flown into complete cloud cover. McGovern held his position, number three, but when they got above the clouds he discovered that they were flying at the same alt.i.tude but the plane that was number two had crossed him and was on his left side. ”I was just petrified with fear at the sight.” The lead pilot saw the situation and called on his radio, ”What's going on here?”

McGovern motioned to the other pilot that he should go up while theDakota Queen went down, and they crossed again until they got into their proper position. ”That's as close as I ever came to being killed and getting my crew killed and losing our bomber,” McGovern said. He was shaking with fear and the ”knowledge of how little control we had over our fate when the weather took over. There was nothing you could do when you flew into a cloud except pray because you couldn't see anything.” On this occasion, Rounds said to McGovern,”G.o.d took care of us.” Over Brux the flak was intense. ”They'd lay that stuff up there,” according to McGovern, ”and it was almost as if an artist had drawn it.” To McGovern, it seemed that the German gunners were getting better after each raid. ”They were laying that sh.e.l.l in there closer to you.” He ”uttered many a prayer going down that bomb run, sort of an instinctive thing you would do.” There was a bizarre array of color, ranging from blue sky over-head to white clouds below to solid black from the flak directly in front, then the huge, angry flashes of red when another sh.e.l.l exploded. ”h.e.l.l can't be any worse than that,” McGovern said later. The pilot and crew had heart rates that almost went through the roof, yet unless shrapnel hit the plane there was no sound other than the engines. Mike Valko stood between and slightly behind McGovern and Rounds, watching the instruments. McGovern glanced at Valko. His face was white. Everyone else was scared too, but except for Rounds and Valko, McGovern couldn't see them.11 The lead bomber for the 741st was using aMick ey radar, so although Brux was covered by clouds he made his drop and the others followed. In another squadron, however, the lead bomber's bomb bay door was stuck, so it dropped no bombs. Since the pilot did not break radio silence to explain, none of the planes in the squadron dropped 75 their bombs. In all the B-24s dropped sixty tons of bombs on the target, while those in the squadron that did not release their bombs dropped them on targets of opportunity on the way back. Except for McGovern's squadron. Two or three other squadrons had completed their run and it was the 741st's turn. Ahead, it was solid black except for flashes of red where sh.e.l.ls were exploding. McGovern was flying number three, off the right wing of the lead bomber. He thought, n.o.body's going to get through this flak. But just then, the leader began making a gentle turn. He bypa.s.sed the target ”and we threw our bombs into the field.” McGovern guessed that the leader's thinking was, I've got this whole squadron up here following my tail - there's no way we're going to get through this and the damage they're going to do to us is greater than we're going to do to them. We may not even hit the target, can't see it, for sure.

I'm not going to take these guys into a place where I know none of them are coming out.

Whatever the leader thought, not one of the men following his plane ever said a word about it. Every pilot and co-pilot, every nose gunner and bombardier and navigator knew exactly what happened. None of them uttered a word of criticism. McGovern said his own thinking was, ”I'm not sure to this day that he wasn't right in avoiding that almost suicidal bomb run.”12 There were other mishaps. On another mission, Lt. Donald Currier reached the bomb release point when a B-24 drifted right over his squadron.

Over Currier's head, the plane dropped its stick of 500-pound bombs. Currier was looking out his window at the time and saw the first bomb strike his wingman at the top turret. There was a tremendous explosion and the plane disintegrated into flaming pieces. It happened in an instant. Currier found it hard to believe that the guys who had trained with him and occupied the tent next to him were gone. Just gone.

The concussion was stunning. The plane that dropped the bomb had its bomb bay doors open when the blast took place. The explosion came straight up and into the plane. The pilot, Lt. Vincent Isgrigg, lost control and slipped out of formation, narrowly missing the plane on his wing and plunging toward the earth. Isgrigg punched the bailout b.u.t.ton and some of the crew got out. But Isgrigg regained control and sent his co-pilot back to a.s.sess the damage. The co-pilot took one look at the broken hydraulic lines and bailed out himself. Isgrigg and his one remaining crew member, the engineer, somehow managed to nurse the airplane back across the Adriatic to the AAF airfield at Grottaglie and crash-landed. For that feat, he received the Distinguished Flying Cross. Currier thought no one could have escaped from the plane that had disintegrated, but forty-one years later he discovered that two guys did get out. They were the tail gunner, Sgt. Robert Hansen, and a photographer who had come on the mission. Hansen explained to Currier that the whole tail section of the B-24 broke off at the waist windows and began floating down like a leaf. The two men had time to jump. They were captured when they hit the ground and spent the remainder of the war in a POW camp.13 From Brux it was a long way back to Cerignola. The mission took eight hours, plus an hour to get into formation. When he turned for home, McGovern used the intercom to check on the crew. He recalled that each man responded with something like, ”I'm here.