“Three… two… one…
Taisiya dropped the bomb over the munitions tent, hitting her mark without a centimeter of error. I swallowed my congratulations for the excellent run when the plane bounced upward with the force of the blast. We’d never bombed from such a low elevation, and it seemed like the regulations were in place for a good reason.
“I think we’re going to be fine,” Taisiya said, anticipating my question. “We’re climbing fine, and she seems to be responding as well as she ever does.”
“Let’s get back as fast as she’ll haul us, then,” I said, wondering what damage might have been done that we couldn’t tell from our rudimentary equipment.
Taisiya gave me a wave. “Have some grenades at the ready in case we get company.”
She needn’t have reminded me. Retreat was often the most dangerous part of the mission. Most times we arrived unnoticed, and it wasn’t until we were on our way back to base that the Germans were in the air and able to return fire. The best they could do until then was shoot at us from the ground, which was plenty dangerous. They would only have a short window to chase us before they got close enough to Russian airspace that their mission would become suicide. The Germans weren’t ones for taking needless risks without benefit, and one of our little planes wasn’t worth losing one of theirs.
But there
My hunched shoulders lowered only as the welcome shape of our aerodrome became visible by light of flares waved by the ground crews. This time no enemy craft pursued us, perhaps owing to the proximity of their camp to ours. Unless they launched a large portion of their fleet for a proper counterattack, it would be too risky to fly so close to our base, which they knew was well awake and prepared to shoot down anyone who got too close.
We landed, and a dozen people, Renata and Polina in particular, dashed toward us. My hands, steady in the craft, trembled now that my feet were back on solid earth.
“We thought you’d gone down. The clouds were thick as soup!” Nika, a pilot, cried out. “We all turned back!”
“What kept you?” Sofia asked, silencing the clamor with the ring of authority. “The visibility was too low. You should have turned back.”
“By the time we’d reached the abort level, we’d been engaged by an enemy spotlight,” Taisiya answered, the relief of being back on solid ground now replaced with sobriety and discipline. Her answers to these questions mattered a great deal, as would mine. “There was no making a stealthy getaway, so I ordered Lieutenant Soloneva to mark the target, and I dropped our payload. She questioned dropping the bomb at such a low altitude, but in the end she followed my orders.”
She was taking responsibility for the damage to the plane, as any decent pilot would, but I had to speak in her defense. “Despite the adverse conditions, Lieutenant Pashkova made the target and destroyed a large stockpile of munitions. It had to be a significant blow to that camp’s ability to advance on us. She delivered us back safely.”
“With a great deal of luck, it would seem,” Sofia said. Her eyes weren’t on Taisiya or me, but on the aircraft behind us. The canvas on the underbelly was badly scorched and had to have been within seconds of erupting into flames.
A meter or two lower and we wouldn’t have survived the blast.
CHAPTER 16
An hour after dawn we were all assembled before the general, whose ruddy face was now a terrifying shade of purple as he spoke to the regiment.
“I expected you to be undisciplined. Girls aren’t raised to understand the need for rule and order in the same manner that boys are. But I didn’t expect you to be stupid and careless. Worse, dishonest.” General Chernov paced back and forth in front of us as we stood at attention in precise rows.