The Dawn Patrol
By Todd Kelsey
()
About this ebook
Dawn Patrol opens in the present day, with Eric’s wife Edith telling their great grandson Billy about Order of the Dragonfly and the Battle of Britain, and how Edith came to know Eric. Edith was a ferry pilot in the Women’s Auxiliary Air Force, and flew Spitfires from the manufacturing plant to airfields. The rest of the novel follows the arc of the actual events of the Battle of Britain, as England made its stand against Hitler.
The Summer of 1940 begins with Eric’s father and other courageous merchant seamen joining the Royal Navy to escort soldiers from France, in the Miracle of Dunkirk. Hermann Goering becomes a central character, the leader of the German Air Force, ruthlessly subjugating Europe. He is hungry to see the Royal Air Force destroyed, but he is overconfident, and high on morphine, from an injury in 1923. Edith delivers a Spitfire to Eric, and he is smitten by the feisty ferry pilot, even as he is eager to fly a Spitfire for the first time. He is afraid of dying but goes up in the sky nonetheless. Eric also fears becoming distracted by affection on the ground, in case it should make him too cautious in combat.
Eric and the Royal Air Force face the German Air Force (the Luftwaffe) who have four times the number of planes. But Eric and the RAF pilots are fighting for their lives, to defend their families and the ones they love. President Roosevelt wants to help, but faces an election, and the Americans do not want another war. However, some Americans, such as the young Rudy Mitchell, come to England to join the Royal Air Force and do what they can to help. Winston Churchill leads the English people in a defiant stand, as England is surrounded, and the people of England send their young pilots in the air, in the hope of defending the skies.
Todd Kelsey
Todd Kelsey, PhD is an Assistant Professor of Marketing at Benedictine University, in Lisle, IL. He is author of 10+ books on media and technology, and several of them are free. He developed an interest in World War II history and the Battle of Britain from a visit to England on one of the anniversaries of the Battle of Britain. Please feel free to connect on LinkedIn: http://linkedin.com/in/tekelsey
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The Dawn Patrol - Todd Kelsey
THE DAWN PATROL
by
Todd Kelsey
SMASHWORDS EDITION
*******
PUBLISHED BY:
Todd Kelsey on Smashwords
The Dawn Patrol
Copyright © 2015 by Todd Kelsey
Discover other titles by Todd Kelsey at Smashwords.com
All rights reserved. Without limiting the rights under copyright reserved above, no part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in or introduced into a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form, or by any means (electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise) without the prior written permission of both the copyright owner and the above publisher of this book.
Smashwords Edition License Notes
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*******
Table of Contents
Credits
Chapter One
Chapter Two
Chapter Three
Chapter Four
Chapter Five
Chapter Six
Chapter Seven
Chapter Eight
Chapter Nine
Chapter Ten
Chapter Eleven
Chapter Twelve
Chapter Thirteen
Chapter Fourteen
Chapter Fifteen
Chapter Sixteen
Chapter Seventeen
Chapter Eighteen
Chapter Nineteen
Chapter Twenty
Chapter Twenty-One
About Todd Kelsey
Connect with Todd Kelsey
--
The Dawn Patrol
Todd Kelsey
Disclaimer: This is the very first beta
edition, and I’m releasing it into the wild before I even have a chance to fully edit and fix it. Please forgive the errors – and feel free to sign up for the email list at http://www.thedawnpatrol.net to receive news about future editions, or to give feedback on things you liked or didn’t like. It would be great to hear from you!
Credits: a special thanks to Martha Sperry for most of the art – the rest is public domain (ex: Alice in Wonderland, Gustav Dore) or clip art (the dragonfly). You can find the story of how this book came about as well as further acknowledgements, at: http://www.thedawnpatrol.net
Chapter One
Sometimes I wake from dreams of battle. Pilot’s blood pulsing, rhythm blurring into the sound of screaming engines, diving, winding through white clouds, piercing bullets, the deadly dance of eagles in the air, menacing each other with metal talons, blue heaven above and around you and orange hell-flame in between and a dark grave waiting six feet underground, moths and red-brown rust destroying over decades and thieves stealing your breath with blinding speed and a whirling tornado of screaming fire like an arrow plunging towards the blessed rest of the green earth below.
By some miracle I make it back, limping and rolling to the hangar. I lie awake there, dreaming of flying again, pursued by my greatest fear – a malevolent force beyond all hope of glory and desire, sucking me down into the paralyzed still vacuum of conversation in a museum, scattering dust and dissipating those sacred split seconds, that summit of my existence and the risk of my destruction, those moments in the sky when I am on the edge of death and yet so fiercely alive.
Billy peered out the window of the taxi, as it made its way across the English countryside, peering out the window, clutching his box of paints and brushes in one hand and his small tablet computer in the other, and holding onto the book he had purchased at Heathrow Airport.
Mom, why are we driving on the wrong side of the road?
he asked, still having a feeling of strangeness visiting England, mixed in with a sense of magic. He was going to see his great grandmother, and she was always interesting.
Just because
she said, patting his arm, and leaning down, when in Rome, do as the Romans do,
in a quiet but playful voice.
Jane was somewhat enchanted herself with England; she had been since she was a child, and it was only recently that great grand mother Edith had moved back across the ocean, to return to the village she once knew,
as she had put it. 98 years old, gentle on the surface, but strong as the hills, and a mind still clear, especially for the stories she loved to tell, about learning how to fly when other women barely had the vote, about the second world war and the Bombing of London, about the love she had for the countryside and the rolling hills.
Jane intoned, Born at the end of the First World War, and just in time for the Second!,
as Grandmother Edith had always said, with a sparkle in her eye and strength in her spine.
Dear Grandma . . .
Jane said, sighing, watching Billy taking in the countryside, wishing Edith had stayed in the United States, where she had been for part of the year ever since the war had ended, but always making a trip back to England for gardening season, dear
with her finger raised in the air and eyebrows raised . . . . and fresh butter!
and a nod, and she was off.
Jane saw a plane fly by in the distance, the sunlight glinting off of silver wings, and she thanked the heavens that Grandmother Edith had finally given up flying planes. Thank heavens! All the arguments and raised voices and pleading from various generations and officials and experts had been met with a genteel smile, and a wagging finger, and something along the lines of Dear dears, now, I was flying before the lot of you were even born,
and she had passed her vision tests and Jane and various others had been tempted to bribe the doctor into failing her on purpose. Even the government officials, local or from London were no help, and all Grandmother would do is wink her eye and say Well now, do you believe that I’ve friends in high places now, dearie?
And Jane couldn’t help smiling to herself. You go, grandma. Give em hell. Any woman who could survive the firebombing of London and wind up having tea with Winston Churchill and then go on to found her own flight school, was certainly worth her salt.
Mom, are you gathering wool?
Billy asked, imitating her facial expressions with a six year old’s exaggeration, raising his eyebrow in that unconscious overstated way, which always made her want to giggle.
Why yes I am, Billy, and look!
she pointed at the fields There’s some wool right now!
and they passed some grazing munching sheep, placidly content.
Jane rolled down the window on impulse, and it was delightful – the smell of freshly cut grass, of field and farm and autumn leaves rolled in, crowding out the sterile air of the car. In this corner of England the development had not progressed along as much, and she felt a sense of home in the stones of the hedgerows and the green ivy and the yellow daisies.
By the time they reached Dragonhurst Cottage, Jane was a bit drowsy, but pleasantly so. Billy was too wired to take a nap, and sprang out of the car as soon as it came to a stop in the familiar little round drive, surrounded on all sides by flowers and wildflowers.
Thank you Miss Jane
– the driver took his tip of crisp paper currency and came round to unload the car. I expect you’ll be wanting me to bring these ‘round back?
and he cocked his head towards the cottage and the outbuildings. Tom was a little bit of everything in Grandmother’s village, the parish of Carlton-Coville – he was part driver, part mechanic, and part conspirator – still maintaining grandmother’s planes in perfect flying condition.
Thank you, Tom,
said Jane, and she eyed him, trying not to smile. How are the planes doing these days?
Tom beamed instantly. Great, Miss Jane! The airframes are as good as new. Aunt Edith kindly lets me put a crew together to take them to various air shows, and it gives people something real to wrap the history around.
What planes?
called Billy from the front doorstep, and then peered back in the front door. Jane put her finger to her mouth. Sssshhh. Eh?
and Tom winked, nodding, and coughed. Oh I was just telling your mother about some model planes I was building,
as he carried the luggage around back of the cottage and disappeared.
Grandmother Edith opened the door, and gathered them into her arms, and it felt like a century had passed since the last time they had seen her – wars and peace and generations and stories all wrapped up in her keen eyes, and still the twinkle there, ageless, like the garden.
A bit later they gathered in the study, and Jane felt a mixture of summer and autumn and sadness mixed in with joy, and a sense of belonging, and hope, and accepting mortality. Death, the passing of seasons, sitting so close to Grandmother Edith, who would spurn any attempts to treat her as old,
even though she’d lived ten lifetimes and maybe more. They were quiet without needing to be, gazing at each other, and Jane wanted to cry.
Oh, Grandma!
Jane said, Whatever are we going to do with you?!?,
and felt a rush of the scent of leather and musty books and the immense weight of being there, and Grandfather not being there. She held it in, it rose from her heart, it trembled on her lip, and she lifted out of the seat and Edith drew her in.
Oh dearie
Grandma said, stroking her hair, now, now, that’s alright.
and Jane wept, knowing Billy would be concerned, but knowing he was ok, hearing him sniffle. I miss grandpa too.
and Jane felt like she was a little girl again, sitting on the same couch, in the same study, as she came back from striking out in the world to find safe harbor in the deep soul of her grandmother. Edith let the tea grow cold, and held her warm granddaughter, thankful for the chance. She gazed at young Billy, and wondered what he might become someday, hoping the world for him, and hoping the world would grow better.
While I’ve got the chance, this is the time. Edith said to herself. Now Edith Wallace, you’ve faced down bleeding men and burning buildings and airplanes out of control, and you can get through this and open the box Eric gave you to pass down, and do it while you’re still alive.
Edith patted Jane, handed her some tissue.
Young Master William
Edith said to Billy, as she handed him a tissue, You’re getting a good start on growing to become a man now, and one thing men like to do when they can is pass down something to future generations.
She said, as she rose slowly but purposefully to reach for a special box from the shelves.
A sunny day, light streaming in through the windows, coming in to get Eric for dinner, coming closer because he is hard of hearing. He shows me the box, and says, This one like the others, Edith, the Order of the Dragonfly,
and smiled with that poet’s smile that had warmed her heart even as their skin had grown wrinkly and their hair silver. And her heart catching a beat with the finality of it, knowing that this would be the last – their children, their children’s children, and now, a great grandchild coming into the world. A sense of the sacred trust hinted at by the words of men who had danced with death in the skies, who had risked life and limb for the sake of their families and friends, and kept Hitler from plunging England into darkness forever - Rescue and Defend
- written in Latin on each box, in between the symbols of eternity.
Edith carefully reached for the wooden box from the shelf, and set it down in Billy’s lap, who politely burned with curiosity. There was always something about Grandma. And his flesh prickled a bit when he saw the phrase, which he had only seen in one other place – on a necklace his father had worn, the last time he had seen him.
Go ahead, open it, it’s just a few things your Great Grandfather wanted you to have.
and Edith felt the ache of the sacrifice that soldiers make. She felt the hollow place inside her, and the memory of losing her son in the Vietnam War and still hoping against hope that he was in a prison camp somewhere. And she felt her granddaughter’s fear, with Jane’s husband Sam now off in a disaster zone with his helicopter. And now this great grandson, who might end up as the only living link for this legacy someday. Rescue and Defend, indeed - the words echoed in her mind with the solid authority of a thousand flowers she had laid down over the years.
Billy looked her in the eye, and Edith held her breath. Just for a moment she had seen he husband’s features outlined in the great grandson – the blue eyes, the serious but kind stare, so old and yet so young. The Wallace legacy. The Order of the Dragonfly. Rescue and Defend.
And then Billy pleasantly opened the box, which contained a small toy, which he knew was a Spitfire, and two envelopes marked Now, and Later.
You can open the one marked Now, Billy
his mother said, wondering whether the Order of the Dragonfly was a curse, or a blessing, or something in between. She exercised her internal muscles, blowing away the butterflies floating around, drawn in by the reminder of how her husband was off in Asia, in some godforsaken weather conditions, doing search and rescue missions – probably as a result of family tradition. Probably as a result of having received a box like this. She felt a protective reflex, an urge to take the box.
After my son died, Jane, I wanted to take these boxes and burn them all
Edith said, her words touching Jane quietly. But then I remember all the men and women who died in England when Hitler attacked us. It all seemed so senseless at the time. Yet later I came to realize how close the entire planet had come to falling into shadow.
She put her hand on Jane’s wrist. And I believe they died for something. For freedom.
She gave a gentle squeeze.
Billy opened the envelope marked Now, and it contained a key.
Jane gasped and her mind did a back flip, like a ball of tightly wound yarn coming unsprung. She didn’t know whether to feel awe, or sadness, or joy.
I remember that