The morning the shit had hit the fan, Greg Torrance and two other
There had been no warning that day three weeks ago.
Those aircraft had approached at better than three hundred miles-an-hour at zero feet, their propellers and slipstream kicking up rooster tails of desert dust, with their machine guns blazing; zoomed into steep climbing turns and dived back down, guns hammering, releasing a blizzard of twenty-five-kilogram blast bombs. Inside less than two minutes the whole aerodrome was wrecked and all bar one Goshawk – miraculously untouched in its newly completed blast berm – wrecked. Four of the forty-one dead and thirty-eight men seriously wounded that day had been pilots, killed when a bomb went off in the slit trench adjacent to the Officers Mess tent, where they had dived as the first wave of Mexican attackers had roared overhead.
Nobody, other than a couple of officers who had blazed away with their service revolvers, or a warrant officer who had launched several flares into the path of strafing scouts – to no effect – had fired a shot in return.
The attack, executed with clinical precision and brutal determination, had lasted less than a minute.
Greg Torrance’s three-Goshawk flight, short on fuel had been forced to try to land between the craters. One aircraft had put a wheel into a bomb hole, ground-looped and been written off.
Remarkably, by the next morning they had got the field back into use, repaired the dirt landing strip, dispersed and camouflaged the three remaining serviceable kites, and settled down to wait for reinforcements and replacement aircraft from the East which never came. Instead, Big Springs soon became a collection point for the lost sheep from the other, shattered squadrons nearer the front, and within days the airfield had turned into a scaled down version of a chaotic flying circus, with three-hundred-and-fifty-mile-an-hour plus Goshawks flying alongside Bristol biplanes capable of only a third of that speed, and a handful of Navy Sea Eagle bombers, putting up token combat air patrols, and mounting two or three plane ground attacks, usually at dusk because wherever the 4th Maryland’s planes flew to the south and west they were always outnumbered five or ten, and sometimes twenty-to-one.
A week or so ago, they had learned from a shot down ‘Mexican’ pilot that what they had mistaken for BMK-57Fs were called F-2 Estrellas Fugaces –
Apparently, ‘most of the’ engines still came from Germany…
The ‘Shooting Stars’ were not the only nasty surprise. The Mexican version of the Sea Eagle was a single-engined low-wing monoplane dive bomber, the B-3, that plummeted down upon its targets in a near vertical swoop with air-sirens mounted under its wings blaring an unearthly, terrifying banshee wail that only changed its note when the aircraft had dropped its bomb and had begun to pull out of its dive.
This latter machine looked like a monoplane version of an experimental Deutsche Luftstreitkräfte three-seater which was widely demonstrated at international shows in the mid-1960s, the SWF-44, one of a series of ‘trial designs’ developed to the pre-production stage by the Stettin Wasserflugzeug Funktioniert (Stettin Seaplane Works), which at the time hosted the Prussian Aerospace Development Design Bureau.
To the Mexicans, this aircraft was the
The Avenger…
Mercifully, these two aircraft, both seemingly in plentiful supply, were the only real surprises of the war in the air to date. Unfortunately, this was only a small mercy. Likewise, the fact that the abject defeat of the CAF in the air had been put into the shade by the humiliating rout of Colonial forces on the ground.
Before the war the pundits had focused on the superiority of Empire-made land cruisers to their Spanish counterparts, which they massively outgunned, and much had been made of the thickness of the angled armour protecting those leviathans.
Huge play of the railheads close to the front guaranteeing the flow of fuel, munitions, food and all the other things a modern army needed. Moreover, it had been claimed that each new settlement in the disputed Borderlands would be a strongpoint ‘choking’ off the enemy advance, while at sea, it had been taken for granted that the Royal Navy would blockade the Gulf of Spain; making impossible any ‘flanking landings’ behind the Colonial front lines.