Natalie. What is it with Dark Haired Gals?
In the Goth
club it was fun. Usual early 80s tunes played on the decks. Very early Skeletal
Family, The Elementals, Red Lorry Yellow Lorry, Xmal Deutchsland, early All
About Eve and local bands in our disco called Sacha's Berlin.
Natalie
dances like her spinning Spanish stunt plane she flies at weekends. Flight and
music are her passions, in time she'll serve in her country's Air Force. Latino
gal pilots aren't new; they fought in Spain back in the late 30s. Nat is
following their Latin tradition.
Her band, a
Goth band is her heart. She represents all that is good and relates to flight
and Goth music. Her path is to fly and create music. Does Nat know that her
path of music and flying will be remembered forever, crossing all divides, be
it years, political or war? With dark brown hair and grey eyes, Natalie was
only Latino in her heart. Her pale white skin wasn't suited to her country's
capital city.
She was born here in Buenos Aires and
followed her local/national bands with a passion. Her stunt plane was named
Mayo after her Goth band. She danced and lived for the moment, wearing her
heart on her sleeve. Little did our lady know, she would be famous for all the
wrong reasons. Nat danced on and felt alive.
Natalie. Basic
Basic flight
training was like dancing to The Elementals. Basic, scary and fun. Did Nat know
that in a year she would be at the controls of a deadly multi million dollar
warplane in the wrong war, with the wrong enemy? No amount of gothic looks
would appease her situation over the coming months. Was it all real? That was a
distant question, not for now.
The girl
danced and flew with equal passion and ferocity. Her brown hair was all over
her face and she danced like a spinning airplane. Eyes shut, she was somewhere else.
In her mind, she was in the cockpit of her red coloured training plane. Her
flight instructor, Alberto, allowed Natalie to acrobat the little plane. She
flew it with wildness that surprised everyone, including her.
Rolling
upside down and pulling the control stick to her guts, the red airplane moved
like a kid’s toy. Diving straight downwards, picking up speed. Alberto was
going to take over before top speed was reached but Nat second guessed him and
pulled back into a half loop. Up they went into the blue, a hawk in the
heavens. Free. Natalie screamed in joy. Looking over at Alberto, her smile said
it all. She was a born pilot.
When the
record changed, Nat went to the bar and ordered a glass of red wine. Joining
her friends, they chatted on guys, music and Nat’s new air force career.
Several of her friends had nice boyfriends or lovers with them. In close
embraces, they kissed and made small talk. Nat chatted to Katie, on the
fundamentals of aerobatics and flight, demonstrating how to loop and roll with
her hand. Her other held her wine. Time passed, music played, wine was drunk
and Nat slow danced with Roberto.
Being
Catholic and part of a close knit family, the girl was a bit of a rebel. Her
mother wanted Natalie to marry and have children. Nat was having none of this;
it was music, flying and the air force. Not even men like handsome Roberto
swayed the girl for marriage. He was local and conscripted in the army. His
passion was films and he had to give up college to serve his country. After a
year he would finish off his film studies, if fate allowed. Both were friends
and occasional lovers, now they danced in Sacha’s.
Natalie. Politico
There was
trouble in The Argentine. A few of Natalie’s friends spoke out against the
military junta who ruled the country. The two girls and one boy, all aged
eighteen, had simply vanished. Natalie was scared. Roberto warned her not to
speak out. The same people who forced him into the army, ending his college
studies, had apprehended the teens. Their fate was unknown and not good.
Nat was
having none of this. She wrote a song, in Spanish, criticizing the government
and asking where her friends were. At a live gig in a monastery town outside
BA, her band did a gig and she sang that song. Other people were watching her.
Her life and new air force career were in grave danger. Did Natalie know or
care?
Natalie
sang her song for her dear friends who were missing. It was no use going to the
authorities, they were responsible! The message was clear. Don't speak out
against the ruling junta. Was Nat actually on their side? Joining the air force
and being a future tool for their use in any war with Chile over the border or
even Britain on the Malvinas. Either thought scared her to death.
While
on stage Nat briefly toyed with the idea of dropping out of her training. The
fate of her friends deeply affected her; she could end up like them. Dead or
missing. People in the audience never took their eyes off Nat. She had power
here, real power. That was dangerous. A shady man by the bar also watched and
waited. Nat cried and sang for her pals and all the other Disappeared. Was it
really real? Teenagers going missing because they believed in freedom? The rest
of Mayo's set passed in a haze of emotion. Two encores later, it was over.
Nat
was drained and got a strong drink at bar. The man in black walked over and
nodded at the girl. She looked back blankly.
Her eyes followed his hand as he opened his jacket. She saw a gun. The
threat was clear. Don’t step out of line. He finished his beer and left the
bar. Natalie was shaking now, frightened that They knew who she was and that
she knew what was going on. Her song was proof of that. The barman served her
drink and she downed it on one.
Natalie. Mid Course
Nat continued her flight training, moving
onto more powerful aircraft, flying on and passing her Basic with ease. Next
was a fast prop plane from America. It handled like a Mustang. Her instructor
was in the back seat. Natalie was up front, alone fighter style.
Her first flight nearly killed them. The
roaring engine stopped dead. Engine failure at six thousand feet brought
silence. She took control. Pushing the nose down not to stall, Nat made a
decision: to land the plane on the Pampas grass. It would save them all. Her
instructor kept an eye on his pupil. They should have jumped when there was
height to.
The grey green trainer floated like a bird
over the huge plain. Nat dropped the nose and flaps and picked a spot. One time
lucky. Earth and plane serenely kissed, a song bird alighting a flower. Nat had
done it! They were down in one piece, with no damage. Long Pampas grass
cushioned their plane.
Nat's instructor knew she would breeze
through flight school. Her next fifteen flights were fun. Dog fights, formation
flying and navigation. Then the jet! Did Natalie think engine failure was an
attempt on her life? To silence her anti government songs? Would the loss of a
flight instructor be acceptable? A bullet in her pretty head would be far
simpler. Or the other way.
They who watched her let her fly. When
Natalie passed her fast prop course with flying colours, They allowed her to
live. For now. She could be used, manipulated and sent to war where she would
no doubt die. They ruled like Nazis. Some had been in a previous life.
Fast jets beckoned and Nat moved up to a cool
Italian aircraft. Fast looking and stylishly designed. On her first flight Nat
knew she would go to war. A gut feeling told her. Her instructor showed her how
to evade a fictitious enemy by rolling, turning and diving, then climbing.
Finally getting on his tail and killing him. He let her loop and roll the
advanced jet.
Thirty more jet flights followed, strenuous
in every way. High speed flight was dangerous. Another pilot crashed. Finally
Nat passed and got her wings. At the passing out parade, she was told what
warplane she would fly. It was the American A-4B Skyhawk. Natalie wanted the
fast French Mirage but so did everyone else. Now she was committed, personal
thoughts or not.
Natalie. Forsaken
What
They did to Nat's three friends was terrible. Abducted by the authorities in
the middle of the night, taken against their will and ending their young
existence. Hours of torture to get any info, put onto a plane and then...
Filipe
was lying in his mother's arms. A caring embrace. No bond was stronger than a
mother's and her child. Especially Catholic. Soon it would be time for his bed
time story, after his nap...
Suddenly
Filipe was jerked violently awake, his drug induced dream history. A huge noise
over came him and he was so cold. No sight. What? He was blindfolded and
his limbs were bound. What was happening? Waves of unconscious started to drag
him under again.
He
was aware of men shouting and someone kicked him in the side. It didn't hurt
due to the drugs. Before he passed out Filipe felt hands drag him to the noise
and a feeling of flying engulfed the young political protestor, then swirling
blackness claimed him. The drugs kicked in before the freezing ocean smashed
his frail body.
Many
perished this way. They were The Disappeared and were shot or drugged and
thrown out of aircraft into the ocean, far from land. Filipe and his two female
friends were only three among one thousand who were murdered this way, along with
tens of thousands more who perished...
Natalie. Battle Maiden
Flying the Skyhawk was easy. Learning tactics
wasn't. Aerial refuelling was hard, as was formation flying. Natalie grew up
and lost her girliness. Inside she was a woman. Her view on the government
remained. Should she bomb the junta in her plane? Thoughts of that were brushed
aside when she was deployed near the Chilean border when tension increased in
the long running border dispute.
Flying three armed patrols convinced Chile to
stop sabre rattling and withdraw her soldiers. Nat was gaining experience.
Public opinion was turning against the government, an ongoing crisis that
needed expert handling. War was the answer. Not with Chile but in the Malvinas.
An army, armed to the teeth, sailed and was
flown out. British resistance was subdued and Argentina took the Malvinas.
Natalie and her squadron were on standby for action. Britain retaliated and UK
ships headed south. Nat trained in anti ship attack. Soon her skills would be
needed.
People were behind the war. Not questioning
about The Disappeared or how to get rid of the evil junta. The Malvinas were
finally ours and a joyous mood overtook many people. In the military, it was
different. A real fight would soon erupt. The Brits were coming and Nat was
scared. What had she got herself into?
Training continued and there was no time for
her band, seeing her friends or little else. Not even secretly discussing how
to help make the government fall with her fellow activists. It was a fine line
of madness. An Argentine air force jet pilot with illegal views and rebellion
songs.
She could change the history of her country,
Argentina, forever. If she dropped a few bombs on the leaders, it was over. The
new war, The Disappeared, the fear. All of it. Could she do it? Would she? Nat
knew where the leaders were and would strike on her next armed training
mission. Fate stopped her. Events moved quickly and the young warrior woman
never had chance.
Nat did hear off Roberto. He was on the
Malvinas in the infantry, untrained and with no dog tags. Film studies were
still on his mind. It was the last she would ever hear of him. Being the only
female pilot in a male squadron, Natalie took no crap. Her practise bombing
scores were excellent. Weeks passed and war came.
Finally it was time. Taking off with three
other jets to hit British shipping, Nat was facing her baptism of fire. Mid air
refuelling gave gas to reach the target. With speed and surprise they attacked.
Who would live and who would die?
Natalie. War Woman
The
Royal Navy ship filled Natalie's gun sight. She fired her 20mm cannons and
pulled up, dropping her bombs. With a sickening jolt they fell free and Nat
lowered her nose, weaving her jet, flying away from the large ship. Tracer fire
and a single missile raced past her. A faint boom indicated her bombs had gone
off. Did she sink the enemy ship?
It
was fly for her life. Sea Harriers were inbound. Natalie cursed her government
for starting this evil war, for putting her in harms way and for killing her
friends. It’s partly my fault, her mind screamed. You wanted to fly, not to
fight and kill or be killed. Silly girl! Suddenly a warning was shouted over
the radio. More voices and then silence. A Sea Harrier had shot down an A-4.
Who was hit?
Nat
just about made it to the Hercules tanker. She shook with fear. When she
landed, her flight suit was drenched in sweat. Two jets were missing.
Natalie had damaged a destroyer and killed British personnel. She was physically
sick. Her Skyhawk had eight small bullet holes in it and this was only her
first mission. The Medical Officer gave her the okay and she attended
debriefing.
The
next few days were critical. British ships had to be sunk and people killed to
defeat the English. It was obvious to all; this would be a bitter fight. Air
power had to defeat sea power. Nat flew another mission with mixed results,
learning to temper her fear and use her skills and new experience. She saw her
cannon fire rake a destroyer but her bombs missed, exploding either side of the
ship.
Her
third mission was her last over the Malvinas. On the hills above the bay, enemy
guns and missiles were getting more lethal every day. Never mind the ships’
weapons and marauding Sea Harriers. Losses were several planes each day. Nat’s
time was finally up. She hit a Royal Navy destroyer, blowing a big hole in it
with her thousand pound bomb. There were many killed. Natalie never saw the
wounded English gunner firing a 20mm cannon when she sped ten metres overhead.
Exploding
shells slammed into her A-4 and Natalie almost lost control. Desperately she
pulled up, avoiding slamming into the black cold water. A 20mm shell blew her
lower left leg off. By a miracle she never passed out, the pain was something
else. Blood filled the cockpit. Right there, she wanted to die. No more pain.
Not physical or mental over her Disappeared friends. One simple shove of the
controls and the sea would claim her...
Natalie. Mayo
In
2012 on the thirtieth anniversary of the Malvinas war, a muted celebration of
remembrance was taking place in Buenos Aires. A band called Mayo were
performing a gig and highlighting their new album. With songs of peace and
above all else, a song about three missing teens from 1981. The singer was a
middle aged woman called Natalie.
She
was a very remarkable lady. By all accounts she should have been dead. Her
final flight, with near total blood loss, in a crippled A-4B Skyhawk had passed
into aviation legend. Even her former enemies had recognized her courage in
making it back to base after being wounded. How she managed to rendezvous with
the Hercules tanker was anyone’s guess. Maybe Nat had a guardian angel and her
job wasn’t war but peace.
“I’m
Natalie. Most of you know my story. How I love music and flying. And how I
still follow those two passions and also a third one. That is PEACE. It was
only after the fall of the junta that I learnt of the fate of my three friends.
How they were abducted by the authorities, tortured, drugged and put on a Navy
plane. Then flown an hour out to sea and thrown out, naked, from thirteen
thousand feet. All perished.”
A
huge crowd stood in silence, listening. Most were young, born after the junta
years and Malvinas war and The Disappeared. However, their parents and older
people remembered and many of these cried, remembering tens of thousands who
were murdered. Most were innocent, a few guilty. All were killed.
“I
could have stopped this by bombing the leadership. Now I know it would have
been a suicide mission and they would have been replaced but people could have
rose up and brought revolution. I never flew that mission. I was ordered to
bomb British ships, this I did. The junta knew of my band Mayo and of my music.
I believe they thought I’d be killed. I very nearly was. I lost a leg and have
inner scars of those years. This song is for my three murdered friends. They
are called Filipe, Anetta and Mahalia. I’d also like to dedicate this to my old
enemy, whose men I killed and maimed. And to my own countrymen who were led to
their deaths, especially young Roberto who never did make his films. For peace
my friends, this song is for you...”
Natalie. An End
In 2012 on
the thirtieth anniversary of the war, the dispute is still raging on who should
own the Falkland/Malvinas Islands. With oil exploration in the area, both sides
need to come together and talk.
The
Argentine military junta started a war that killed almost a thousand people.
This must never happen again. Never mind the tens of thousands of The Disappeared
who were murdered for being a threat or having an opinion or different views or
for simply being in the wrong place at the wrong time.
Natalie is a
character of my imagination but in Argentina and in Britain and in every
country upon this world, Nat has brothers and sisters who say NO to war and
repression. Let Natalie’s voice always be heard and never ever silenced.
For Natalie,
warrior woman turned warrior of peace.
Natalie. Natalie and Nick
I forgive
you Ruby for hurting me. Now I must move on and go far away from you. I’m
getting married to my warrior friend. Please don’t be mad with me. I think
you’d approve and like Natalie. She loves gothic music and even has a band
called Mayo, never mind her tattoos and love of flying. Like you, she speaks to
me in my dreams. Unlike you, she won’t ever hurt me. I wish you happiness with
your new flame, Ruby. I must go and meet my new bride.
What is it
with dark haired girls? For Natalie, my kindred spirit who finishes my
sentences and loves kebabs, as I do! I see myself inside of you and I see you
in me. You, my dear Latino lady. My lover, my sister, my friend, my wife,
mother of my children. Protector of my country, your country, our country. You
showed me your world, a group of islands, South Atlantic. So beautiful, like
you aged 18 in 1982 and now 48 in 2012. Malvinas, Falklands. Our home.
I hold your
hand and see the waves lap at the shore, eternal movement. Like the planets. Oh
Natalie, we shouldn’t be together. We are. You the Argentinean lady, me the
English guy. Enemies no more. Later, you’ll take me flying in your red Spanish
two seat stunt plane. We’ll touch the aquamarine blue and loop the loop, fly
low over the ocean free as a bird and stall turn like a butterfly. I’ll protect
you from repression and pain my dear wife. Forever.
If we can be
happy and at peace, so can our two countries. Let them learn from us. Peace and
love, born from the war that cost you a leg. Nearly your life. Now a new life
grows slowly in your belly. If he’s a boy, we’ll call him Roberto, if a girl,
Mahalia. In memory of your lost Disappeared friends and Roberto.
Natalie. Roberto
Oh my dear
friend Roberto. I remember back to our time, when we made love. Not the last
time but the time before. When you were doing your college film studies and
were so happy on your future. It was you who said, “Nat, I’ll make the best
film ever made.” And his dear eyes were so full of passion, life and innocence.
And a love so powerful, I cried, right there. A love of life, film, his country
and lastly, for me. I knew then in that moment Roberto loved me. Maybe more
than all the other things. How was that possible?
I replied to
his film statement. “Tell me, what film will you make Roberto?” Those precious
eyes clouded over. I heard him whisper: “Why Natalie, I’ll make the film about
you. A small story about you, how you’re in a band and love to fly in your red
stunt plane. My film is about you Natalie.”
I was
utterly speechless. Those close to me, and anyone who cared to listen, knew my
voice was always in motion, just like the ocean. He looked at me. That moment
is still with me over thirty years later. I never did reply to him. I embraced
him and cried tears of joy. For him and for a love I had but never dared admit
to myself, till Roberto died in a British artillery barrage weeks later. I was
in love with him. He has no known grave.
Was his body
found and marked ‘Unknown Argentine Soldier’ because he had no dog tags? Those
beautiful innocent eyes are gone forever. I can’t remember what colour your
eyes are!
Oh my dear
Roberto, I say it now. Every day since you were killed in battle, I say aloud
my love for you. Even now I’m married to Nick and with him, he understands. His
words bring clarity to me when I weep for you, dear Roberto. A life stolen by
war, unfulfilled. You never did make your film about me, never completed your
film course or chased your dreams. All dreams shattered by Them, those who
forced you to join our army to fight the English.
I quietly
say to myself, your end was fast and you never suffered. I don’t know exactly
where you lost your young life, just the area. I’ve been there to see with my
own eyes. I felt you were nearby to me. Are you still earth bound my love? Are
you? I sense that you are. Please be happy for me and my new family. I wanted
all this with you but war stole you from me, forever.
At least now
I have someone who should hate me for what I did to his countrymen and who
listens to my incoherent words about you Roberto. It shouldn’t be Nick wiping
away my tears, it should be you. Please stay close to me. I have to move on
from those awful times. I dedicate my life to peace. Please understand my lost
friend.
Natalie. San Carlos Water
Pieces
of flotsam and jetsam floated on the early evening tide. Turning this way and
that, always in motion. Never still, each bit jostling with the other for a
foothold on the sand, being denied by the rolling water. Little bits of
detritus in the ocean. In time, all would be land born and still, stranded for
awhile till the next high tide.
On
a large rock something slowly smouldered, gentle orange flames framed by the
setting sun. A sepia photograph of a past event. By a sheltered pool, more fire
slowly flickered before petering out, forever. Extinguished by a gentle spring
breeze that blew in from nowhere, adding to this once perfect scene, now
disturbed by another event.
Several
people had rushed to the beach, after seeing it happen. They pointed and
talked, their attention drawn to three ruined objects tossed haphazardly onto
the shore. On closer inspection, the broken things were distinguishable from
everything else. One person was sick and looked away with a grim expression. A
smell of iron and gasoline filled the air, further spoiling what was almost
paradise.
A
red fragment of debris foundered upon the shore. Two men waded into the surf
and dragged the unwieldy bit of smashed metal ashore. One gained a nasty gash
upon his hand. Salt water stung his wound and he swore. His blood
indistinguishable from the ruined aeroplane, binding him to this scene. Finally
reaching the damp sand they dropped their find, seemingly more important than
the other flotsam.
“It
belongs to them. I can read ‘Mayo’ on the metal. Look, there,” one of the two
said. His colleague nodded. Other people gathered around the men, needing to
see for themselves proof of what it was. As if the three broken bodies weren’t
evidence enough. Like acid eating away a pretty face, everyone knew the awful
truth. Nobody dared to utter the obvious. As if committing war and sinfully acquiring
a place in hell?
Exceedingly
slowly, the sun set and coloured the bay at San Carlos Water a beautifully
vivid red. All present would remember this moment for all eternity. One old
soldier limped over to his daughter. He wasn’t afraid to speak, being battle
hardened on this very island. “I watched Natalie’s red stunt plane loop and
roll in this sky, not an hour ago. I never saw her fly like that; she looked
just like a bird. Then they came apart mid air and fell into the sea.”
“No
dad, it’s not the same sky you saw Nat fly in. Her sky was always blue. This
red sky is one of death. Somebody great died here doing something she loved,
along with her family. Natalie loved peace. She would want to be remembered for
that, as a free spirit who stood for peace. Her sky will always be blue, no
matter what happens dad. Forever,” replied the soldier’s girl. He knew she
spoke the truth. Everybody did.
Only
God knew what happened when Natalie did aerobatics in her precious little
Spanish stunt plane named Mayo. Did she overstress her airplane pulling out of
a loop? Nothing except broken smashed fragments remained, including Natalie’s
fractured body. Her husband Nick and their young son Roberto were equally
disfigured; so ferocious was Mayo’s airborne structural failure. Three lives
selfishly stolen by death.
“You’re
right, Natalie’s sky is always blue. It wasn’t good. I’ve not seen anything as
bad since the war way back in eighty two,” nodded the ex British soldier. His
gaze took in the scene before him and his daughter: people attempting to drag
bits of Mayo out of the shallow water. Closer still and the final flames
flicked out, turning to smoke; he wanted to ignore difficult attempts to save
the bodies. It was like their old war and as wrong.
“We
must continue her work. Her and Nick and Roberto would want that. We must keep
their passion for peace alive, forever. We must do this for them and all of us.
We must never forget what happened here, forty years ago. So it never happens
again. And always remember that Natalie was part of war and then peace. We
always must believe,” replied his daughter. Her tears fell at San Carlos
Water...
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