armed. Radar wasn’t that good, not up to the standard of the American fighters, but the German night-fighter crews knew their business.
The RB-29C had four radar receivers; one in the nose, another in the tail, one in each wingtip. A skilled operator could use those to get a rough directional cut on the radar source.
“How far out?”
“From echo strength, I’d say 15 to 20 miles. Perhaps 25. Want me to jam him boss?”
“No. Keep the tricks for later. Tell me when he’s dead astern. We’ll make him work for his dinner.”
At this altitude, the RB-29C could manage 390 miles per hour, subject to the engines overheating. If the books were right, the He-219 could manage 416. That gave it a 26 miles per hour speed advantage. The night- fighter wouldn’t catch the fleeing reconnaissance aircraft for 35 minutes at worst, 45 minutes at best. The battle would take place anywhere between 250 and 300 miles north of here. The same books said He-219 had a range of 960 miles. The question was, where had he come from? Just how much fuel did he have left?
“Cloud level is at 20,000, Jan.”
“OK, we’ll head for it. How thick?”
“Weather braniacs said a 5,000 foot layer. There’s a hell of a storm system running through. It’s not too bad here, but Kola is getting really pounded.”
“That gives us some room to breathe.” Niemczyk put
It was a strange sensation. The individual minutes seemed to drag by, yet every time Niemczyk looked at the instrument panel clock, the hands seemed to have jumped forward. “Where is he?”
“Dead behind us. Estimated two, perhaps three miles; no more than that. May be less.” They were already in the cloud layer, the gray-white shroud clung to them. The enemy radar could still see them, but the crew on the fighter would be searching for the dark shadow of the bomber. The RB-29C had an edge there. Its bright silver finish didn’t have much of a shadow. In the air, it tended to be shadows people saw, as dark patches on a light background. Contrary to myth, matte black was a very bad color for a night-fighter.
“Everybody to an observation panel. Watch for the slightest shadow.” Originally the B-29 had had multiple remote controlled turrets with their gunners in blisters. The RB-29C had discarded them and the blisters had been replaced by flat, transparent observation panels. “Mickey, you’re the most likely to see him first. Yell out at the slightest hint. Just don’t fire.” The twin .50 caliber tail guns were
“Shadow, behind us.” It was Donovan in the tail turret.
“Drop chaff. Jam that radar now.” Niemczyk waited until the chaff cloud deployed and the jammer in what had once been the bomb bay was pumping out energy. Then he hauled
“You see that Jan? He’s got cannon firing upwards. What the devil is he playing at?”
“That’s new. Logical though. Cannon like that will gut a bomber. The braniacs need to know about them. They were probably firing on an estimated position when they lost us.” In front of them, the shadow faded into the mist. Niemczyk thought carefully.
“No sign of emissions. He hasn’t picked us up yet. Wait, I’m getting sidelobes. No main pulse, just sidelobes.”
“Feed jamming energy into them. Try and make him think we’re heading northeast and diving.” In fact, they were heading northwest and climbing. Once again the minutes were ticking past.
“There it is!” The waist observer had seen the dark shadow of the night-fighter, silhouetted against the white of the cloud layer. “Behind us, 235 degrees. At least eight, nine miles away. Not as good as Niemczyk had hoped, the night-fighter pilot must have realized early what had happened and made a good guess on his target’s course. Still,
CHAPTER THREE: COLD WIND RISING
“You’ve gone brown.”
Inanna looked up, rather apprehensively. “How does it look Nammie?”
Naamah inspected Inanna’s dyed hair with an authoritative eye. There had been a time when she’d made hair colorings from plant extracts but those days were long gone. “Your eyes don’t match, but there’s nothing you can do about that. I should know.” Naamah’s eyes were a dead, slime-green, frightening to the point of being repulsive. “For the rest, only your hairdresser will know.”
Inanna giggled at the reference to the advertising slogan used by Clairol for their range of home-coloring products. The company held a national competition to select an advertising slogan for their new product. ‘Only your hairdresser will know’ had been the alleged winner. On paper, it was a reference to the quality of the product that could match salon hair products. In reality, a veiled reference to the fact that it offered blonde women a way to look less German. Looking German was neither sensible nor safe. The newspaper on Inanna’s desk proved that. “You heard Tommy Lynch sent in an entry to that competition?”
“Oh no, what did he say this time?”
“It read ‘mix up a double batch and give yourself a matching snatch’. It won too, only the company management vetoed it despite the fact it would have doubled their sales. Does it really look good? Coloring jobs in salons are getting too expensive these days; this way is a little less costly. I thought I’d try it out first and if it works fine, we’ll make sure all the blondes in our family get supplies. We’ll dip into the reserves for it.”