Harry
showed up at the corner of Texas Highway 1863 and Bulverde Road in a small
bakery which had a coffee bar. A little early, he went in and ordered a cup of
coffee and a doughnut. He took his cup
outside and plopped down in a wooden, low-back chair. Amazed the chair didn’t collapse; he ate
his doughnut and took in the view. This
particular block and part of the block across the street was typical old time
rural Texas. He felt transported to a
rural, small town setting in the late thirties early forties, or earlier.
The
buildings, the one he was at, and the four others in the row next to it, had
seen better days. They were covered with
thin, weather beaten clapboard and he estimated the last time any of them had
seen any paint, Truman or Eisenhower would have been President. Of the five buildings, the bakery was the
only one currently occupied. The others
in the block sported broken windows and faded signs advertising an Art Shop, a cafe, and something
else which he couldn’t
decipher from his vantage point. They
testified to forlorn hopes, broken dreams and hard-lived lives.
Across
the street a small sign of modernity existed in the form of a combination food
mart and gas station called “Sweet’s” and
he could see some old timers sitting in chairs next to the window while
someone, Harry guessed it was Sweet himself, brought them a hand-made sandwich.
Kind of old fashioned. He allowed
himself a bit of fantasy and imagined it wasn’t
Sweet but Sweet, Jr. or Sweet the third, carrying on the family business.
To
the left of gas station food mart, there were other older buildings, some
occupied and some empty. Harry knew that
back behind this veneer of rural Texas were residential neighborhoods of
sizable bedroom communities divided into neighborhoods which served the greater
San Antonio metropolitan area. He knew that the homes in those were modern and
middle class. But sitting here looking
at these building holding out against the march of civilization, he felt a
sense of forgotten history. Behind this
building stood the Bulverde Post Office, housed in a building so flimsy looking
that one wondered if the next heavy rain would float it off. Painted white, he noted that underneath, the
paint, the wood appeared aged. Yet it had
a nice asphalt parking lot.
Further
down his left across the street, he saw a caliche drive and a sign pointing to
another ramshackle structure which indicated the building was a restaurant
called “Mike’s
In The Village”. Sam had told him that once he solved this
case, he was going to take him there for dinner. He noted that while the sign appeared to be
as aged as the buildings surrounding it, someone had actually painted it as
recently as five or so years ago and then treated it to look ancient. Harry was surprised when Sam told him it was
a gourmet restaurant and that one needed reservations if one wanted a seat on
most nights. Maybe those middle class people
in the surrounding neighborhoods patronized the place.
Typical
rural Texas. Only a block long at the
most but it had a feel to it. Some
places just refuse to die.
Surprising
himself with those observations, he reminded himself he wasn’t there to take in the view or to
contemplate a gourmet meal he might have someday. He sat there waiting for a pilot to take him
on a flight in the local area. Harry had
noticed the strip on his left as he drove in.
A single North-South strip with three hangars lined up on its West side and
a field to the East.
The big Bulverde Airpark!
A
typical strip for those weekend flyers who flew Visual Flight Rules, or VFR,
and the pilots announced their takeoffs and landing on a preset frequency to
avoid any air to air mishaps. Even
though he had flown commercial since his retirement from the Air Force, he had
felt a spasm of regret driving by, especially when he saw the Cessna 172
sitting in front of one of the hangars.
He
had taken the initiative to get his Private Pilot’s
License when he was in the United States Air Force Academy Preparatory School
so he could convince the Air Force to place him in the fighter pilot career
track once he graduated from the Academy.
It worked out well. While in the
Academy, he learned the Air Force had a screening program for those seeking to
enter the pilot career track. So he got
a big plus when he applied for the screening program and informed the officials
he already had an FAA Pilots License.
The Academy entered him in the Initial Flight Screening program where
they sent aspiring pilots. Since he
already had his private pilot’s license, he established high scores
in that program.
That’s
in the past, he told himself for the millionth
time.
He
continued to let the old buildings lull him, enjoying the feel of times gone
by.
A
black Suburban turned right off of Cougar Bend and headed his way. It pulled up and a man stepped down out of
the truck. He walked over and as he
walked, Harry noticed he had a habit of pulling on his belt near the front
loops next to his belt buckle. The
movement served to draw Harry’s
attention to his belt buckle which Harry recognized as a replica of an Army
Aviation badge.
Ralph
had an easy manner and a quick smile.
Harry liked him from the first moment they met. He stood about five feet six inches, trim
physique, grey hair and a clipped grey mustache. Harry guessed he was somewhere north of sixty
but that was hard to tell.
“You Harry?”
Two
days earlier, after making arrangements for Sam to come by the gas station in
New Braunfels and pick up his Mustang, he dropped by Sam’s
to get the postmortem on the engine.
While there, he gave Sam an update on the case.
He
explained to Sam the Comal County Magistrate had failed to issue the search
warrant which Harry needed to reach a resolution. He planned to accompany the Comal County
Sheriff’s Lieutenant when they executed the
warrant.
He
told Sam he had everything figured out.
When Sam pressed him for details, he begged off. He was very confident he knew exactly what
happened but he needed gather one more piece of information and then confront
the family. He explained he planned to
rent a light plane with a pilot and do some aerial surveillance to gather some
additional information to present to the magistrate. Sam said he could help.
Sam
made a phone call and here he was, talking to Ralph. After explaining to Ralph what he was after,
he went to the rental car and brought out the maps. They spent several minutes going over the
maps Harry had brought with him.
They
spent a few minutes getting to know each other.
Harry learned Ralph had spent 23 years as an Army Aviator flying both
helicopters and fixed wing utility aircraft and then retired to become a fixed
wing commercial pilot. He had logged
over 6500 hours in the Merlin Metroliner and then accumulated over 500 hours
flying twin and single engine light aircraft such as the Cessna 172 they were
flying today. He was proud of the fact
that he had over 17,000 flight hours.
Harry
would have been proud too. He knew he
could never garner more flying hours since he the government had permanently
grounded him from ever flying again.
Then
they loaded up in Ralph’s Suburban and drove past the post
office and parked behind the hangars. It
turned out the 172 he saw at the front of the hangar was the one they would be
using.
He
helped Ralph with the preflight of the Cessna and they took off.
Flying
VFR, he watched for other air traffic as they flew north over Highway 281 and
then veered east when they reached the Guadalupe River. There were several residential areas which
offered riverside plots and homesteads near the river. Harry was interested in one particular house
located about three blocks off the water in a development called River Acres.
They
made a pass at 2000 feet and Harry located the dwelling he wanted so they
commenced to make several more passes.
Ralph flew two passes at 1500 feet with a 30 degree right bank so he
could snap some photos.
Then,
they made two more passes at 1000 feet and a final pass at 500 feet while he
snapped as many high resolution digital photos as he could.
When
they leveled off, Ralph turned and said, “We’ve got about 30 minutes of fuel left
if you want to take a turn.”
“Would be nice but I
don’t
have a ticket. FAA won't license me.”
“Sam mentioned
something about that. You were some
hotshot fighter pilot and shot down some fighters in peacetime?”
“Well, that might be
true, but you know what they say, if I told you about it, I would have to kill
you. I will say that if it happened, it
sure as hell didn’t
feel like peacetime.”
“Ha! All that aside,
young fella, I can see the hunger in your eyes.
All I’m saying is we can go back and land or
I can goof off a little and you could satisfy some of that hunger.”
Harry
smiled, “Have you ever done
any aerobatics in a 172?”
“Most people say it can’t
be done. You know as well as me. Not enough power and the structure might not
take it.”
“Well I appreciate the offer but if I took the controls, I’d
have to show you why I almost got thrown out of the Academy Initial Flight
Screening program.”
“You know as well as
I do that this plane is not rated for aerobatic flight. Unless you time your maneuvers just right you
could rip the wings off. The plane
simply is not built to withstand the g-loads beyond a certain point. But, what the heck, let’s see what you got,
young fella."
“Before
I get started you have to tell me how old you are. I don’t
want to give you a heart attack.”
Ralph’s
eyes flashed.
“Harry,
I turned 80 two months ago and don’t
you worry about my heart. Okay, just
remember the Colin Powell Pottery Barn rule."
If
you break it you buy it.
Harry
took the controls, climbed to 7,500 feet and flew a due north heading. As soon as he took the control wheel, that
feeling returned. The same thing he felt
the first time the Instructor Pilot had taken him up and let him have the
controls.. It was a feeling like no
other he had ever felt and every time he touched the controls of an airplane,
it returned. It was as if he had grown a
new set of legs and arms because all he had to do was feel and any plane he
flew responded like an extension of himself.
It was true with the Cessna 172 he flew when he received his FAA Pilots
License and the Diamond DA20-C1 aircraft he flew in the Academy Initial Flight Screening. The T-1s, T-38, and the AT-38s he flew in his
Undergraduate Flight Training program evoked the same feeling. Then when he started flying the F-15 Eagle,
the Air Force’s air superiority fighter, this feeling of congruency with the
airplane blossomed and he really felt like he was an eagle.
Now,
the feeling flooded into him so strong it almost overwhelmed him. He felt it so strongly that had he been
walking, this tide of emotion would have bowled him over. He got it under control and relished in the
delight of flying again.
It’s been so long.
On
the way to altitude, he executed a few turns to acclimate himself to the
plane. It took a few banks and turns for
him to learn the airplane and discover any peculiarities about this particular
airframe. It didn’t take him but a
minute or two to reach a point where he felt that he knew this plane inside
out. He had arrived at the place where
he felt this aircraft was truly a part of him.
He then performed a slow roll in which he kept the airplane at 7,500
feet while he rolled the airplane 360 degrees slowly around its longitudinal
axis while maintaining level flight by cross-controlling the elevator and
rudder inputs. He combined this action
by also including a hesitation roll by stopping momentarily at the four
cardinal points during the roll. Once he had become even more attuned to the
feel of the airplane, he proceeded to fly a well executed barrel roll, like he
had done while on one of his Initial Flight Screening flights. In performing the maneuver he demonstrated a
sense of the aircraft rather than some learned skill and he was able to back
off just before any adverse damage from g-loads could occur. He had almost washed out of the program
because even though he had been flying solo, an Instructor Pilot flying in the
area had observed him.
He
has always felt the need to push every plane he flew to the limit. His mentor in the air force, Bulldog, had seen
it and encouraged it until Harry could fly an F-15 fighter jet to the very
limits of its capability. Bulldog had
also taught him that even though he flew the same type of airplane, every plane
was different and every sortie was different.
He had drummed into his consciousness that every time he took the
controls, he had to know the plane he flew like he knew the back of his
hand. That fact enabled Harry to succeed
in a life and death situation over the Iraqi-Iranian border. He knew the capability of every plane he
flew; just as now, he knew the capabilities of this Cessna 172. He knew that if he had to, he could make this
plane sing.
Ten
minutes later, he finished and looked over.
"It's
your airplane", released his hands from the controls and Ralph took over.
"That's
some flying, young fellow. I'm
impressed."
"Thanks."
"You
have a good feel about the plane. I've
only seen it in a very few people. It's
like you know just how far you can take her.
Sam said you were an Eagle driver.
Said you got the Air Force Cross.
Must have been some flying there?"
"I
was lucky. Besides I think there was
some politics involved. I used a new
procedure to get me out of a tight situation.
I'm sure my fellow jocks would disagree about my tactics."
"What
do you mean?"
"
Can't really go into details. It's
classified. But it involved using data
links to ensure my air to air missiles flew to the target okay. You know that my fellow jocks would never
admit to using help in an air to air situation."
"Hell,
Harry, in the Army these days, I'm not sure they would know how to fly without
data links. ‘Specially in our
rotary wing birds."
A
pause.
"Think
you'll ever get back on status?"
"Doesn't
look it. Trying to focus on my new
career."
"We'll,
from my point of view, it's the Air Force's loss."
"We
still got a few minutes; you wanna try a barrel roll?"
"You
know, don't mind if I do."
Ralph
replicated all of Harry’s
maneuvers and added two of his own. His
aerobatics complete, gas low, Ralph flew the plane back to the Bulverde
strip. On the approach, he noticed Harry
looking at him a little strangely. After
they landed, Harry helped him refueled the plane and they pushed it into the
hanger.
Harry
couldn’t help but ask.
“You’ve done that
before, haven’t
you?”
“Sorry, Harry, that’s classified. If I tell you, someone might have to come and
kill you.”
He
smiled, “But I will say,
once bulletproof, always bulletproof.”
Harry
offered to pay for the gas but Ralph told him Sam had already taken care of it.
When
they parted and Harry offered his thanks, Ralph grinned and said, "the
pleasure was all mine."
Bev won’t believe me when I tell her
I did aerobatics in a Cessna 172 again.
First time in 30 years. Damn, I’m
still bulletproof.
The End
Ed Benjamin
© 2014
You can also find more Harry Miles' adventures in Harry's War on Amazon or wherever digital books are sold.
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