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1633 by David Weber & Eric Flint. Part six. Chapter 38, 39, 40, 41

No going back now. Time passed slowly, as they raced for the coast. The white undercast stretched endlessly before them. Curiously, Jesse felt calm, as if the bet had been made and he was just waiting for the results of the game. He spent the time thinking about how to get down.

How deep is it? he considered. Maybe all the way down to the ground, but if that’s true, who gives a shit? Okay, so there’s a ceiling down there, somewhere. Can Hans fly formation in the soup? No formation lights. He’s good. But how good? How good are you?

Jesse rubbed his chin, looked up and stared at the storm, a moving juggernaut looming closer.

Come and get us, you bastard. If you can.

He noted the time and checked his kneeboard. Time to go down. He picked up the mike.

“Two, Lead. Hans, bring her up the reference line into fingertip. Just keep your reference marks in place and stay with me. We’re going down. One thousand feet per minute. Copy?”

Hans answered promptly, all business. “Copy, Lead. Two’s in.” He had brought his plane within six feet of the other, slightly behind Jesse’s right wing.

Jesse took the stick. “Pilot’s aircraft.”

The undercast looked peaceful, harmless as they slid down to it. As they neared, it became less smooth, less uniform. Jesse unconsciously braced himself and concentrated on his turn and slip. He deliberately loosened his grip on the stick, using only his fingertips, as they touched the mist.

Darkness. Jesse felt the aircraft heave, buck, as it passed through succeeding layers of cloud. He used a light touch, didn’t fight it, small corrections, sought to swim down through it.

One thousand feet per minute. Ball centered. No bank. Keep it straight. Needle, ball, airspeed, altitude. His crosscheck became a blur, eyes darting, his mind working, not thinking. Ball. Airspeed. Bank. He couldn’t tell how long it had gone on. He wasn’t steering, he was the aircraft, sliding down ever deeper. Smooth, wingtips bouncing, no rudders, touch of down, now up, down elevator. Gently sinking, sinking. Airspeed. Needle. Ball.

Jesse was surprised when he burst out. Over water at 600 feet. Made it, by God!

His next thought: “Hans!”

Woody was shouting beside him, “Still there, still there! God, I swear he disappeared a couple of times!”

Jesse didn’t have time to be relieved, they weren’t down yet. Heading. He was shocked to see they were still on heading 345, steady as a rock. He saw land ahead, which could only be possible if . . .

Mary, Mother of God. It was the north shore of Wismar Bay. There. The shore battery guarding the entrance to the bay. He’d hit it on the button.

He cleared left and made a gentle turn, rolling out south toward the field. Ten minutes later they were both down.

Jesse switched off and looked out. The first big drops of rain splashed on the Belle’s windscreen. He looked over at Woody.

“Lieutenant Woodsill, would you mind getting out the chocks? I think I’ll watch the rain for a bit.”

“Colonel Wood and Captain Richter are on the ground in Wismar.”

Mike looked up quickly at the announcement. John Simpson stood in the doorway of the office Mike had appropriated here in Magdeburg with a folded piece of paper in his hand.

“The radio room just got word from Lieutenant Wild,” Simpson continued. “Apparently the weather was closing in and they just got down in time, but they made it safely. I thought you’d like to know.”

“You certainly thought correctly,” Mike told him, and heaved a deep sigh of heartfelt relief. The pounding rain which had swept over Magdeburg just before sunset had made him more than a little anxious about Jesse and Hans. Wismar was over a hundred miles from Gustavus’ capital, so there was a lot of room for local differences in weather. But, judging from the difficulty they’d been having with radio transmission to Holland, the rain seemed to be part of a storm front crossing over a large stretch of northern Europe.

“Sounds like things are looking up in Wismar,” he said after a moment.

“Yes,” Simpson agreed, but his own expression was much less relieved than Mike’s. “At the same time, however, the situation there is scarcely what I’d call secure. Lieutenant Cantrell and Lieutenant Clements seem to have managed rather better than I’d allowed myself to hope they might where jury-rigging the speedboats is concerned. But General Aderkas is still several days from the city. And until he arrives, the prospect for Wismar’s managing to stand off a serious Danish attack is hardly a favorable one.”

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