Page Six Word came over from the ether clearing station that there would a burial of British and Americans shortly because the Jackals were already howling - the first time I have over heard them howl in daylight. There was a burial in one grave regardless of rank or nation, with John Michael Matthew, the little Burmese Chaplain from Rangoon diocese attached to the Kingts; reading the service and everyone fervently following in the Lord's prayer - with motors high in the air suddenly but nobody looking up or moving to take cover until the rough wooden cross was planted and the last spadeful of earth was in - then scattering in all directions. But it was only our top cover, cruising far above, during the daylight hours, according to careful plan. All through the forenoon the engineers toiled in the gathering heat. Doc Tullboch was back empty handed. The captain with the broken foot had been too dazed to keep his directions straight. Doc got another set of directions from the injured sergeant and went in again. But again the directions were wrong and again Tulloch came out empty handed and dead-beat with cutting through Jungle growth for upward of ten miles. Brig Calvert roughed in the casualty list as it was known to us and as we could guess it farther from known factors of missing gliders and suddenly it was amazingly small for what it had purchased. In another six hours thousands of troops would pour in power ships on this airport of ours - that some of the first wave men had died to secure. There was the hum of light motors in the sky suddenly and over the treetops came the tiny planes off Major Rebori, jaunty, frail and insolent in their perfect formation. They have come across the vast enemy-held terrain at tree-top level, with belly tanks to get them there - the Maytag Helldivers come to take out the injured. We got one of them to cruise the jungle and located Doc crash. He brought in the exact bearing. We %shot the azimuth and cut into the rank growth of jungle and after an hour of it, we found the crash. Two men had survived it and we got them out. Jerry Dunn was in there - to stay. So were the rest. He had been wrong - you mustn't talk about it - you mustn't think about it. When you have an appointment in Samara, you will keep it, whether you talk or not. The American Engineers toiled on throughout the long, stessing afternoon, smoothing the strip for the power ships, lengthening it - making the airport. Their officer lay in there in that jungle crash with the rest of them - the third officer they have lost to date. " Every time we get a job in Burma we lose an officer". They stood around for a moment, helpless, bewildered, angry deep inside themselves, then young Brackett, the last lieutenant they had, said "O.K. - two more hours of daylight, Get going The Combat Engineers - shovels and machine guns and all the toughest jobs in war to do - but with the holy fires of something in their souls to carry them on without something that only a combat engineer can understand - and nobody else need try to, The sun was tow, sinking to the tree toes sad the shadows were pooling deep across the clearing - them clearing far in enemy territory - so far that when you looked at it on a map you still couldn't quite believe that you were there. But you were - and it was no longer enemy territory - it belonged to us| It was an airport, ringed now with enough men to hold it for the time that was left to wait - test listed for the troop-carrying power ships as the sun went down- and the lights worked A wrecked glider was the control tower - John Allison was ready in it, with his control radio. |