Page Two "We've got late afternoon reconuaissance photos. It looks as if the gaps have obstructed Bond Street, as if they were wise - so welre all going to pile into Fifth Avenue. Alright - get going| And Just remember the dope on Fifth Avenue -forget all the rest." John Allison came over on the run John is a fighter pilot but he had checked out on gliders a few days before just to make this flight for he is Cochran's second in command with the job of mining all airport in twelve hours out of a jungle clearing. He got in and Doc Tulloch crawled in beside him. Magoffin and I climbed in and the detachment from the Kings Liverpool Regiment under Wilson filed in behind us. Everyone of us was in full field kit and armed to the teeth with carbines, tommy guns, pistols, knives and grenades. Uminski, with admirable enthusiasm had fitted a tommy gun stock to an air cooled 30 cal machine gun for hip and shoulder firing. A pirate crew, Wingate's army and Cochran's Air Commando's, in mottled camouflage suits, with broad brimmed rakish, paint dabbed Jungle hats - most of them with a growth of rank beard, which seemed to be one of the few local conceits. There was no excitement, no eager babbling to quiet screaming nerves, no bravado - for this was no quickly cooked up raid. This was an amy, filling the great gliders row on row behind us - a force in heavy strength with hundreds of miles of night flying ahead of us over trackless jungle and jagged mountains - night flying completely over a formidable Jau force to let down far behind it and to operate on an extensive scale in its rear. It was history in the making. The gliders are towed in pairs on long ropes. Seese was flying the left glider in our tow. He carried Brigadier tread "Mad Mike" Calvert with most of one of the Brigade staffs aboard. Ground crews rigged the ropes as our tow ship taxied out like a great waddling duck. We were being hooked in when the Dec %touched and pointed ahead, "First tow air borne|" - there it was clear of the tree tops in the late afternoon sun with its two lumbering gliders weoving behind it. The second tow was roaring down the strip raising an enormous dust cloud, strugcling and howling for flying speed, bouncing slightly, straining, straining and then tearing free of the earth and its own cloud of yellow just and coming into clear silhouette above the tree top Our glider jerked and shuddered as our tow ship took up the slack on the ropes. Then we began to move down the strip into the dust. On both sides of the field the long line of troops were still filing in endlessly to fill the other gliders behind us. Suddenly as our tow ship came to full throttle every thing blotted out in the dust - everything but John allison at the controls and the faces of the men in the glider - a little bit drawn at the mouth, a little bit tightened around the eyes. We were racingto take-off, bouncing slightly, straining on the end of the long tow rope, shouldering heavily for flying speed. Ahead of us the great tow ship was up few feet to the left and slightly ahead, Seesels glider was air borne. So were we, with Allison bearing down heavily on his right rudder, sweating over it and shouting directions to Doc Tulloch to trim ship. We came up over the trees fighting for altitude and presently we settled into the long, slow, grind of wide circling to get our height for the mountains ahead. The soldier beside me handed over his naps, "Will you circle Fifth Avenue with your pencil -we're the Bond Street party." Everyone unclipped their safety belts and eased packs. The Doec and I went into a huddle over the map and got Fifth Avenue lined in for everybody. Then we settled to the log flying hours ahead - long, cramped, smokeless hours with God knew what at the end of then. All of that vast activity that had been around us for days, was gone now, and we were alone, in the setting Assam sun. It flooded the glider and tinted the inside of its fabric with rose gold. It picked |