Shaken from the explosion, I barely noticed the shadow cross over my cockpit, and continued my climb, turning to the left.
Hurricanes!

I called out to Ganz to watch out, and was chagrined to hear him whoop that he was diving in on one....the lead Hurricane...leaving himself open for the wingman!

"Break! Break Ganz, Break!" I called over the radio.
"One second and I've got him!" Ganz called back.
"One second and you're shot down!" I yelled, my voice cracking. Was I to lose my entire flight?
I rolled right and then left as the British lead went left and right, helping his number two get a bead on Ganz. I cut hard and hoped to get in a quick burst..

I fired across his nose just in time, forcing the wingman to break left. Time to extract some revenge...


Continuing my turn left to hopefully keep Ganz alive, two Hurricanes were turning over the ridge towards me.

I had little choice but to meet them, hopefully crossing to their side and then a half-roll onto their six.
But they weren't interested in passing over or to the side of me. They charged head on!

At three hundred meters I let fly with my cannon, they with their machineguns. It was all a blur of the vibration of the guns, flying debris, and then a hammer to my face that nearly knocked me unconcious...

One eye open against the pain and I had the image of a Hurricane not 25 meters from my nose, nearly inverted, as I squeezed hard on the trigger and closed both eyes.

Everything was red on my goggles, my head aching, a strange numbness under my mask and warm liquid filling my mouth, making it hard to breathe. The mask came away in my hand without effort, falling from my face and I spat red on the console.
Blood. A lot of blood.
No time for that, though, I looked over and reflexively turned the aircraft. One of the Hurricanes did not survive our merge, and I saw him strike the desert:

My face had gone numb, perhaps from the cold of the altitude, though my eyes were swelling rapidly.
Time to go home.
To my north, however, lay what looked like seven reasons why I would be delayed:

They pounced on me at once, and I found a Hurricane 150 meters from my tail, turning for a shot:

A stream of bullets rattled against my aircraft and a soon a trail of fuel from my right tank. His wingman joined in the chase, and I found myself in the reverse of a position I had had with the English so many times before:

I broke hard right, then left and dove, hearing the screams of someone that sounded very much like myself as the g-forces pressed on my head, throwing blood down my neck and into my coveralls.
"Help...I need help..." Ganz cried out.

I felt light headed, almost as if I were watching from outside myself, as I turned into the fight, thinking nothing at all. A Hurricane flashed above me as I pulled up from under the trio:

I lazily turned into the Hurricane and pulled the triggers:



It was as if I were dreaming, the echo of Ganz's cries for help sounding a million kilometers away, as I turned left to see them turning onto him:

I only saw a silhouette of an aircraft, and closed:

Missing badly, I closed, firing once more...

A small voice was calling out that I was shooting at him over the pounding of my own heart and it snapped like cold water in my face that there were two radiators under the wings of my target - I ws shooting at Ganz!
I broke left and low, making for home.
A formation crossed in front of me, big unusual planes that seemed odd and still familiar...

I rolled right sloppily to see they were Bredas trying to escape the melee!

I leveled out and began a gentle climb to the north and home base. I do not recall anything of the remainder of the flight save a glance at my final approach:

They say I managed to land the aircraft successfully, though I nearly hit an aircraft that was attempting to taxi to dispersal.
=========
I awoke in the hospital tent in the evening, with a huge bandage on my face and the otherworldly sensation of morphine floating me between thin sheets. Blankets strung around the bed walled me off, and I croaked for some water.
The doctor slipped into my makeshift room, grimaced, then smiled.
"You are a lucky man, Herr Oberst," he said.
I simply looked at him.
"A piece of the armored glass struck you in the face."
"Nose," is all I could say.
"The tip of it was gone, sliced right off, along with a centimeter of the cartilage. I've stitched you up and we've given you a liter of blood to replace what you'd lost."
"Ganz."
"Returned to base safely. He says you saved his life by warning him of an Englander on his tail by shooting at him."
"Schiller."
"Dead."
And I wept. I do not know if it was for him or for me. But I wept, a deep quiet sobbing that rang a sorrow I had never known before.
[edit]
Happy little sortie, wasn't it?
Now do you know why I've been putting off writing it, besides being busy as all get out?