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...
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