Berlin, April 30, 1945
Nicoli opened his eyes wide. It took him a few seconds to realize where he was. He blinked repeatedly, trying to wipe away the recurring nightmare, but the memories of the past four years remained fresh. He regained his composure as he scanned the expanse of burning and destroyed buildings around him, and calculated that in those few precious minutes of sleep, nothing had changed in his kill zone.
Years of combat had made Nicoli into one of the best sharpshooters in Stalin’s elite Red Army sniper squad. He remained motionless, even while in sleep. Melding in with the destroyed architecture, his clothing part of the insane scenery.
A worn and discolored cape made him invisible to the untrained eye. It was a perfect accessory for a sniper, and the reason it was on Nicoli’s back was because of its previous owner’s, a German sniper, inability to remain still. He had won that shootout, and many more after. Now he just waited, like he always did, for a target to come across his line of sight.
Nicoli was in a precarious but well-thought-out sniper position, perched up high on one of the few standing buildings in the Berlin area near the infamous Reichstag Building. The building below him was partially destroyed and Nicoli knew that he ran the risk of it collapsing under him at any moment. Still, he remained.
He was an expert at choosing his targets, which had given him 14 kills from his current position. The secret to his high body count was to make sure that the enemy was alone; if not, whoever was with the victim would figure out from where the shot had originated and call in support to take the sniper out.
Berlin…he thought. Soon the Red Army will triumph and end this war.
He had to be cautious…he couldn’t risk making any mistakes now.
The constant cracking of bullets breaking the sound barrier echoed off the rubble below. Its sound was almost rhythmic at times, only to be interrupted by the occasional mortar round exploding, sending its concussion wave into the surrounding structures and shaking the dust off the wood rafters above his head. Nicoli noted that the sounds of war were quieter 40 meters above the city. His mind began to wander off to how life would be after the war. He missed the solitary sound of a calm wind, or the water from a stream cascading over countless boulders. Serenity, that’s what he wanted most, but all he heard was the sound of war…all around him and down below, where personal battles were being won and lost.
A glint in the horizon caught his eye, breaking his focus. He aimed the Mosin-Nagant 1891/30 PU sniper rifle’s scope to the object in the sky. He knew what it was, or could be…or was his mind playing a trick on him? Nicoli closed his eyes to remove any fogging and opened them again.
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Otto Von Ludger swore out loud, and forced the aircraft into a deep bank as another bullet flew through one of the many Plexiglas panes in the small cockpit of the Flettner Fl 282 Kolibri “Hummingbird”—an open cockpit, intermeshing rotor helicopter, or synchropter. He knew that he had no choice but to endure this suicidal ride to freedom, or at least into an American prison, because if he were to be caught by the Russian army, he was as good as dead. Worst of all, he knew that if he was going to make it out, pleasing the SS officer sitting in the rear-facing seat behind him would be key.
Otto was lucky in retrospect, because the choice he had made to become an experimental test pilot kept him away from the dangers of war. First, he flew the Folk Wolf FW-190 G9—the first Folk Wolf fighter plane with a 12-cylinder, inline fuel-injected engine—a vast improvement over the original radial engine. Then came the fast Messerschmitt jets, but his true curiosity led him to fly the new concept of controlled hover-flight.
It was a radical change for him to be hovering in midair 100 meters off the ground and with the immediate responsiveness of the machine to move in whatever direction he pleased, even backward. What amazed him most was its ability to land and take off from almost anywhere, including the stern deck of a battleship.
The technological advances were great, but his love for the machine sprang from how it felt—as though it were an extension of his body. He would climb over the flat Plexiglas panels and strap himself into the uncomfortable leather seat, becoming one with the machine. That connection made him the best helicopter pilot in the Luftwaffe, but that caught the eye of a high-ranking SS scientist from one of the most feared units in Germany. The scientist sporting the rank of an SS colonel recruited him just before he’d been about to make his escape.
“Scheissen!” Otto yelled as another bullet bounced off the thick steel plate surrounding the fuel tanks. Otto eyed the tanks, and smiled at his foresight in bulletproofing his helicopter. Scanning the remnants of the city below, he made another sharp turn and followed a wide boulevard until he saw red smoke rising from a ruined courtyard. He banked the helicopter once more and flew toward it.
Otto looked down and hoped the pick-up would be fast. He wondered what package was so dammed important to send him into hell and back. What he did know was that his helicopter was to be refueled for the trip back, and that alone would allow him to get far away from the Russian army, but he had to drop off the package first.
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“No wings?” Nicoli asked himself. “Look, Satlana, no wings. What do you think it is?” he asked his dead wife. As always, there was no response.
Nicoli adjusted his prone position on the top floor of the building and checked his rifle by feel. Satisfied, he let out a deep breath and cleared his mind.
“Just follow him and see what he is up to,” he whispered.
Nicoli eyed the aircraft through his scope as it flew closer. He noticed its four spinning blades perched atop the fuselage. As the aircraft turned, changing its flight path, he could now see that the blades were counter-rotating. It pitched its nose up and slowed down to a complete midair stop.
Nicoli’s mouth opened, amazed at the flying feat the aircraft was performing 400 meters in front and below him.
It’s hovering like a hummingbird.
The pilot in the cockpit moved his head from side to side, trying hard to keep the aircraft rotor blades from striking the walls surrounding the courtyard as it descended.
“Bljat!” Nicoli swore as he focused on the seven German youth Brown Shirts and two military officers who had gathered in the courtyard of the dilapidated building under the aircraft.
Nicoli tried to line up a shot, but he wasn’t feeling lucky enough to shoot through the spinning blades. Shooting the pilot was now out of the equation. He waited and scoped out the targets below him and made up his mind. He made a mental note that he could register two kills before they dispersed, and picked out the most decorated officer as his first target.
Take two shots and leave.
He began to calculate distance-and-wind to target. His four-power magnification scope had a fence post pointer in place of the traditional crosshairs. He aligned the tip of the post on the mass of the SS officer’s black tunic uniform, and focused between the rotors and target, trying to judge when he could take his shot, but the spinning blades kept his target safe.
The helicopter’s wheels licked the rubble-strewn floor of the destroyed courtyard before the full weight of the aircraft pushed out the sidewalls of the rubber tires. One SS officer bent down and held on to his visor as he walked toward the pilot underneath the spinning blades. Nicoli watched as the air pressure being produced by the blades picked up loose material on the ground, whipping it about, making a shot even more difficult. He paused, taking his eyes off his target, and looked up when he heard the familiar and frightening sound of a bomber’s radial engines high above.
18,000 feet above Berlin
“Jerry, 10 o’clock high, coming in fast!” came through the headset.
The .50 caliber machine gun behind Captain McCormick shot multiple short bursts at the German Luftwaffe Me-262 jet diving toward the cockpit of his B-17 Flying Fortress. Thomason, Captain McCormick’s flight engineer, ducked as instinct took over when the jet fighter’s bullets ripped through the cockpit, killing Stevens, the 22-year-old copilot.
McCormick turned to see his copilot’s head was missing. All that remained was a shredded jaw and the leftover remnants of what had been in the cavity just a few seconds before. McCormick’s facemask ruptured violently as he vomited into it. He turned his head back, and during convulsions and spraying bile, managed to get an order out to Thomason.
“Thomason! Get him out of the seat and take his place!”
Thomason looked forward and saw McCormick trying to wipe the blood off the instruments and windshield. “Jesus Christ...” he mumbled as he noticed what was left of his friend’s head.
A frightened voice crackled over the intercom. “Sir, we have a problem back here.”
“What is it now?” McCormick asked.
“We lost a bomb bay door! I can see a fuse on one of the lower bombs spinning!”
McCormick answered after a moment of shocked speechlessness. “Can you reach it?”
“No, sir. It’s hanging out of the fuselage.”
“How long?”
“We have maybe 30 seconds, sir.”
The fuse on the 500-pound bomb had a small propeller that would spin a given amount of time before it would arm. This fuse, when hit, would set off the bomb. McCormick and the others knew that, once armed, the bomb could go off if it hit the sides of the plane during turbulence or evasive maneuvering.
“Crap….” McCormick weighed the importance of the mission, looked at his watch and decided on the spot. “Little! Change of plans. We are dropping our load now! Engaging autopilot!”
“On it, sir,” Little said as another Me-262 took a potshot at the Fortress.
McCormick reached down and toggled the autopilot switches, giving control to the bombardier. Once the autopilot was engaged, the bomber would remain on a straight and level course for the bombing run, thus increasing the accuracy of the drop, but it also made the bomber an easy target for the enemy fighters.
“Little, autopilot engaged,” McCormick called out to his bombardier.
“I have control!” Little responded as Thomason pulled the body from the copilot’s seat.
“Pick a safe target. Remember, there are many friendlies about in Berlin.”
“I’ll try my best, sir,” Little said, who knew that a millimeter mistake at 18,000 feet could cause enormous collateral damage below.
“Okay, boys, phase one is snafu. Phase two still a go—”
“Jerry, 12 o’clock!”
“Jesus!” McCormick screamed as another Me-262 came head on, its 30MM MK-108 cannons blasting at the Fortress. “Crap, how many 262s are out there?”
“Sir, I count five. Maybe six.”
“Seven,” Sesperela, the tail gunner, said. “The others are taking on the Mustangs.”
“Eight o’clock!” yelled the belly gunner from his ball turret, which hung under the plane. The waist, belly, and top turret gunners let out a volley of .50 caliber bullets at the fighter plane. The bullets tracked to the oncoming plane and found their mark, tearing through the plane’s left jet engine pod. A puff of smoke came out the rear of the jet engine and a second later the 262 exploded in a ball of fire.
“Yehaw! Take that, you fucking Nazi!” screamed Kilroy, the red-headed, 19-year-old waist gunner.
“Good shot! Little, release the bombs so we can drop these Marine Jarheads and get home in one piece.” He heard a small chuckle through the intercom.
“Roger, Captain. Target acquired. Ready to drop in five,” Little said, voice pitched high, shaken up by the intense firefight. “Bombs away!”
The B-17 shot up into the air as it released its tonnage of death.
Nicoli could see that the blades were not slowing down, so his shot would have to be after the flying machine took off. He relaxed a bit more, but the sounds of the bomber overhead made him nervous.
Following the SS officer’s orders, the Brown Shirts took up positions around the helicopter with their submachine guns at the ready. After a few seconds, two more German officers came through a door carrying what looked like a gray, rolled-up rug between them. Nicoli pulled out his 8x30 binoculars to get a closer look at the action. The binoculars gave him a different perspective on the scene playing out over four football fields away and below his perch. He could see the flying machine, its pilot, and the Hitler youth in their brown shirts; two were pouring gasoline into the side tanks of the machine. He also caught a closer look at his target. The man was SS, and by the look of his tunic, a high-ranking officer of the German Armored Panzer Divisions.
The two officers moved low under the spinning blades and placed the rug into the backward-facing seat next to the SS passenger behind the engine compartment. One of the soldiers saluted the pilot. Nicoli heard the engine rev, saw the flying machine lift off the ground, spin around, and pick up speed, heading away from the courtyard and Nicoli’s position.
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Otto swore as he took off from the courtyard. “More weight; that’s just what I needed.” Otto thought he’d be picking up some kind of paperwork, but the extra weight in the back had changed his plans. Not only would he burn more fuel, but also the helicopter was past its weight limit, and a greater danger to fly. Otto went over the map strapped to his thigh, searching for the new coordinates that he had been given, and ignoring the bullets ricocheting off the steel plating.
Otto adjusted the map on his lap and banked the helicopter right, yet again trying to avoid heavy incoming fire. He thought of his luck as he pondered the reasoning behind flying into Russian-occupied territory.
He calculated the distance.
Eighty miles south-southeast. I am not going to make it back.
He was flying away from the Americans, and the trip back would take longer. That was fine as long as he could get fuel at the next stop. Otto went over his situation. He looked up and around at the many contrails and spotted the jet escort the German SS general on the ground had said would protect him.
One by one the jets dove toward his position. He recalled the general’s last words that if he was not able to reach the drop-off site, the jets would make sure that he would not be captured by the Russians.
Otto banked yet again and said out loud, “You mean you’ll shoot me out of the sky, you Goddamned Nazi.” Damn, he hated the SS.
I knew it, there had to be a catch. He was beginning to doubt he could make his plan work.
Otto looked once more at the small duffel bag tucked behind his feet containing his civilian clothes, some money, and a Spanish passport. He banked the aircraft around some tall pines and headed out of the Berlin outskirts and straight into Russian-occupied territory.
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Nicoli immersed himself in the world he now viewed through the scope of his sniper rifle, ignoring the flying machine as it lifted out of the courtyard. All that mattered now was the target. The wind had died down and the post point drawn on the scope’s lens found its mark within the red haze of smoke.
The officer in black shouted a couple of orders at the Brown Shirts, then stood in front of the tallest boy and began to speak to him. Nicoli took a deep breath, calmed his mind, and began to squeeze the trigger.
Inside the rifle, the firing pin flew forward and into the primer on the 7.62x54R round. The primer ignited the powder within the casing, forcing the copper bullet forward under incredible pressure. The bullet began to spin while traveling through the barrel, following the barrel’s grooves, and exiting into the clean air after traveling 27.8 inches in less than a hundredth of a second.
At the same time the copper bullet passed the broken window into its free horizontal trajectory toward its target, a mass weighing thousands of times heavier was finishing its own vertical trajectory. Within its mass, a mechanism much more complicated than that of the bullet armed itself. The tip of the fuse depressed as it hit a broken roof rafter, producing a chemical reaction, igniting the 500-pound explosive charge inside it, disintegrating itself and all the material and life within the building it had just entered. Nicoli was evaporated, but his last action remained flying as a couple of similar explosions occurred behind the bullet’s flight path.
Nicoli’s bullet beat the shock waves; it even beat the human reaction of the bombs from the B-17 Flying Fortress going off. The bullet, after traveling 407 meters, reached its mark.
Nicoli never saw his bullet penetrate the SS general’s head, and he never saw one Brown Shirt’s reaction as the bullet exploded out through the general’s face, covering the boy in bone, brain matter, and burnt flesh. The bullet continued its deadly path, penetrating the outer skin of the Brown Shirt’s jaw and running along the outside of his face, leaving a long, open wound as it embedded itself into the wood beam behind the Brown Shirt’s head.
The boy stood there in shock for a few seconds until another 500-pound bomb went off where the rest of the group had taken cover. He was thrown back by the concussion wave, past the wood beam, and down a flight of steps, ending up unconscious at the entrance to a collapsed basement.
“11 o’clock high!” a voice screamed over the Fortress’s intercom.
The .50 caliber machine gun, which Thomason had just left, fired yet again at another incoming fighter. Thomason looked back to see that one of the Marines had taken his place on the roof turret.
He was amazed at his calm. He, and the other passengers sitting in the radio compartment past the bomb rack, looked as comfortable as if they were on a regular plane ride from D.C. to New York. The funny-looking, shaggy suits, camouflaged uniforms, oxygen masks, and equipment were the signs that they, too, were at war.
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Earlier in the day the group of five Marines had marched themselves onto the flight line, called out to Captain McCormick, and given him a letter. He read it, nodded, and received a sharp salute from the Marine major. The captain then called the crew together and told them about the change in mission.
The lone crew of the B-17 was to head east, covered by two P-51 Mustang fighter interceptors over Berlin, all acting as a photographic reconnaissance flight. Once over Berlin they were to head south-southeast, drop to 14,000 feet, and offload the bombs over a predetermined pocket of German resistance. The Marines were then to jump out. After dropping their cargo, the B-17 would turn west and head back to base.
The new flight plan was reviewed and the crew told to keep their mouths shut. The captain ordered them to remove four of the 10, 500-pound bombs, and replace their weight with extra ammunition and fuel for the extended flight.
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Thomason was shocked back to reality as the flight controls exploded in front of him and a searing pain shot through his arm. “Shit! I’m hit!” he yelled as McCormick saw his new copilot grabbing his left arm. Blood ran through his fingers as he squeezed.
“Major!” McCormick hollered back to his passenger, who was busy firing at the attacking planes. “Get your medic up here to take care of Thomason’s injuries.” McCormick looked to his right as the Marine stepped over Stevens’s lifeless body and entered the cockpit, wielding a knife.
He cut the sleeve off Thomason’s B-3 leather sheepskin jacket, took a quick look and spoke to McCormick. “Shrapnel. You want me to dope him before I take it out?”
McCormick turned, looked at Thomason, then at the Marine. “Yeah, go ahead, I can fly the Fortress alone if I have to.”
“Captain, we are coming up on second waypoint in two minutes,” the bombardier said over the intercom.
“Roger that.” McCormick looked back as the Marine went past the engineer’s compartment to the narrow bridge between the empty bomb racks to get the morphine from the first aid kit in the radio compartment. He removed his mask and yelled back to the Marine major, “Major, you have two minutes till dro—”
The major was blown past the bomb racks and landed face first onto the radio compartment floor with a force that came close to knocking him out. A cold rush of wind hit him as he opened his eyes. He was stunned as his team gathered around him and helped him up.
“Major! You okay?” screamed Marine Sergeant Collins over the rush of wind blowing through the aircraft hull.
Major Dean DuMonde blinked his eyes, adjusting his focus. He staggered up and turned around to see that where the cockpit and nose of the plane were supposed to be was now blue sky. Realizing the fate that awaited the remaining crew, Dean yelled to the radioman to tell the remaining crew to jump. The belly gunner quickly climbed out of his spherical pod as one of the waist gunners rushed back to pass the message to the tail gunner. Dean looked forward one last time and admired the B-17 as it kept flying straight and level.
Dean watched on as the tail and waist gunners jumped out, followed by the belly gunner and radioman. The B-17 started to bank and Dean knew they only had a few remaining seconds to jump. He looked down through the open bomb bay doors at the passing landscape and got his bearings. They were close to the target, but would have to watch out on their short hike for any leftover German Panzer tank groups.
He looked up and yelled over the howling wind, “Sarge! Your lead!”
The sergeant and the other Marines dropped down through the bomb bay doors. Dean took one more look, rechecked his equipment, and dove head first into the open air.