Wednesday, July 2, 2014

"Dinghy's Dilemma": An excerpt from the novel that I am putting together

The foul purplish scud overhead had changed to an unrelenting downpour.  The constant tapping against the drafty window only worsened Dunham’s already foul mood as he studied the memo on his battered wooden desk for what seemed like the hundredth time.  He reached for his cup of coffee and recoiled in disgust.  It was now ice cold.  He was about to call his aide to bring more coffee but stopped short.  The memo was code word Top Secret/NOFORN and he had several maps spread out over the desk along with many scribbled notes and calculations.  There was much to do and it wasn’t worth the trouble to tidy up and secure it all for the sake of a hot cup of coffee.  His wide and naturally intense black eyes burned with incendiary irritation.  Gathering himself, he turned and took a worn blue binder out of the small gray steel bookcase behind his chair.

Thumbing through his worn copy of T.O. 1F-101A-1, “Flight Handbook, USAF Series F-101A Aircraft,” he flipped through the first few pages to Figure 1-2, “Block Numbers.”  Dunham stared intently at “F-101A-25-MC, A. F. Serial 54-1444A thru 54-1452A,” wheels turning as he mentally ticked off the tail numbers of the nine aircraft produced.  How many of them have made it over here?  He needed to go talk to Senior Master Sergeant Rawcliffe, the section chief in charge of all maintenance of all of the wing’s aircraft.  Dunham picked up the phone and dialed the five-digit extension to hear the young voice of Staff Sergeant Mersky on the other end.  SMSgt Rawcliffe had gone over to RAF Woodbridge, the second of the Bentwaters “twin” bases, to sort out a problem with the 78th’s line chief, Stedman.  Muttering a gruff “Thanks,” Dunham called his driver to bring the jeep over to take him the several miles over to Woodbridge.  Muttering invectives under his breath, he tightened his rain jacket, secured his service cap, and as he closed his office door behind him told his aide that he would be out and that no one was to enter his office.

The sound of the rough treads of his jeep announcing his arrival, Colonel Dunham stepped out of the vehicle and stopped to look toward the flight line before continuing into the squadron maintenance shed that stood in for Master Sergeant Stedman’s office.  “As you were!” he growled as the two senior sergeants began to snap to attention.  Walking in toward the window opposite their desk and then turning back toward them, the colonel greeted them with a wide horse-trader’s smile.  “Good morning, boys!  I hate to disturb you, but I was wondering if I could borrow Master Sergeant Rawcliffe for a few minutes?”  Stedman agreed and hastily excused himself to give the two senior men the room. 
“Good morning, sir.  What’s going on?”  The tall sergeant was rough-hewn, but had softer features than the intense colonel before him.  Dunham shot a toothy grin back and said, “Walt, I received a special request this morning that I was wondering if you could help me with?  How many Block 25 aircraft do we have assigned?”

A puzzled look shot across Rawcliffe’s face as he counted through the memorized tail numbers.  “Well, sir, a couple of aircraft remained stateside for test work, and one or two more have been lost, but by my reckoning, sir, we have five Block 25 aircraft assigned to the wing: 444; 445; 44…9; 451 and 452, sir.”  Dunham was lost in his thoughts for a second as he looked again towards the flight line.  Without looking back he asked, “Have any of those five birds suffered any landing gear failures or had the original gear replaced?”  Rawcliffe stood silent for a few seconds, not sure where the conversation was going or if he wanted to know, for that matter.  “Well, sir, I will have to check the 781 forms, but as I recall 451 had a gear failure about a year ago that required replacement of the main struts, and I think maybe 449, too.  I can check and let you know right away once I get back to my desk, sir.” 

Dunham rubbed his short, thick brush of graying black hair as he paced back toward Stedman’s desk.  “So that leaves 444, 445, and 451, doesn’t it?   445 is a hangar queen, isn’t she?”  Rawcliffe noticed the uncharacteristic tone in the colonel’s voice.  “Yes, sir, she seems to spend more time in the hangar than out on the line, but she has never had any landing gear work done that I know of.  May I ask what this is all about, sir?” 

Rawcliffe was met with Dunham’s large, wide-set, beady eyes looking back with a rare reserve as he thought through his response.  “Walt, I want you to keep quiet about this and I want you to pull the records for all three of those planes and scour them with a fine-toothed comb.  If there is a squawk of any sort I want you to personally double check it and make sure it is fixed and fixed right.  Next, I want you and Master Sergeant Stedman--he is a hydraulics guy, right?  I want you guys to GI those struts and run both the main and nose wheel struts to their full extension.  You will find that on these particular aircraft you are going to get more extension on them, about an extra six inches or so.  Lastly, I want you to pull that little center panel between the engine bay doors and check that external stores hook on each bird.  Make sure that it is working and that it’s not going to fail in any way.  There’s also several small panels forward between the fuel drain doors, just aft of the ammo bay, and I want you to open them up and check out the plumbing and electrical connections in there, too.  Make sure that it is all in good working order.  I’ll tell you more later, but right now I want you to get on this and report back to me ASAP.  Any questions?”  Radcliffe unconsciously stood ramrod straight as he acknowledged the gravity behind the colonel’s request.  “No sir.  I’ll get Stedman and we will get right on it, sir.”  Dunham picked his cap and as he made his way back toward the door he turned back.  “And Walt, check and be sure on 449.  I could really use four aircraft.”  With that he stepped out into a break in the weather.  Fighting the glare of the sunlit puddles covering the slick road, Colonel Dunham climbed back into the jeep as they ground down the road back to Bentwaters and, with any luck, a warm steaming cup of coffee.

Back at his desk, Dunham remembered a small bit of information that he had heard several years before in the spring of 1956.  The whole F-101 program was a train wreck then, teetering on the razor’s edge of being cancelled.  Among all of the other problems was one that still remained closely held and unknown to most of the pilots and maintenance troops that serviced their aircraft.  Block 25 was being produced at that point, but the aircraft then sat on the ramp in St. Louis for nearly a year while various fleet-wide modifications were carried out to fix the major problems and get the Voodoo ready for squadron service.  The original armament, about which he never spoke except to the old man and the squadron commanders who were around the airplane in those days, was deleted but the early aircraft still retained the long-stoke struts that could be inflated to give the extra ground clearance needed for the large, and now defunct, centerline store.   He was pretty sure that they were gone by Block 30….  The extension provisions were supposed to be removed after cancellation of Shape 96, but in the rush to get everything done and the intensive effort needed to make over 300 critical modifications to each aircraft he thought that he had heard that they just left it alone in those early squadron aircraft.  Rawcliffe would let him know for sure by close of business that afternoon.

Dunham looked down at a large scale map spread out on the center of his desk.  He used his extended pinky to pace out distances on the map.  The inbound course to the target is about 1,500 statute miles, accounting for a couple of “doglegs,” with a direct return of a little over 1,000 miles…call it 1,100.  The original fuel store carried 1,400 gallons of fuel and the refueling stores carried, what, about 1,200 gallons of transferrable fuel?  Are there any of those things gathering dust somewhere?  I really need to get a hold of Adrian and see if he knows anything.  I will need a minimum of two of those for tanker aircraft, and two of those spoofing pods, if those things even exist anymore.  Four airplanes.  Just four measly airplanes…that’s all I need to get this done.  Are these aircraft equipped for the countermeasures  pods?  I’ve got to check on that, too.  Might have to do some rewiring….

Reviewing his growing mental checklist, Dunham began to organize the scattered pages of notes into a manila file folder and clean off his desk.  Turning the silk-smooth dial of the combination lock on the safe behind his desk, he heard it click and pushed down the heavy steel lever to open it and placed the folder inside.  He flattened the large map smooth for one last time as he studied the familiar shape of the Caspian Sea, and traced out in his mind the penciled line that he had drawn, dancing along its shoreline and headed north.  He could feel the burning blue over the faraway desert, see in his mind towering dust devils plying across the dusty sands in the distance.  It would be a tough mission under the best of circumstances and they would need every drop of fuel to get to the objective and back.  There was no doubt that it would not be under the best of circumstances, but perhaps the audacity of the plan would give them the advantage of surprise.  It seemed a delicate thing to hang an important, presidentially-directed plan on but it was all he had, and even then the tools to accomplish it simply might not be available anymore.  Four young men were going to have to be selected to fly the mission.  Dunham carefully folded the map, deposited them all into the safe, closed the heavy door and pulled up on the level to hear the satisfying “chunk!” as it locked shut. 

Standing up and turning toward the window, Dunham reached for his cup of coffee to take a sip, lost in the vision of faraway places.  He grimaced as he sipped and then held the mug out at arm’s length, inspecting the lukewarm coffee with utter disdain.  Not again!  Well, just shaping up to be one of those days, I guess….  Listening to the distant ringing whine of big J57 engines as a pair of F-101s began to taxi out for a training mission, Dunham looked out through the broken, soggy cloud deck and into a vision of a barren, incandescent landscape of impossibly bright blues, tans, and grays.  He would give anything to be out there and not tied to the worn old desk and the stale carpet behind him.

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