One of his crew had already witnessed a fireball a few thousand feet below, where a single Soviet interceptor had met a premature end at the hands of the escort.
Enemy activity was light, in fact, they had been told to expect none of note.
The true bonus for the men of the misleadingly named ‘63rd Reconnaissance Training Section’ was that Spectrum Red had hammered most of the Soviet units that could have sprung to the defence of their ‘target’
The mission could have been run over friendly territory, with different parameters, without the fanfares that had accompanied the briefing; most certainly without the two scientists onboard.
However, the hierarchy had decided to conduct the dry run over enemy air space, a decision on which Barnes and the rest of his crew had not been consulted.
Never a man to take things for granted, Barnes was on the case of his gunners, making sure that no one would sneak up on his pride and joy, ‘Jenni Lee’.
Since he and his crew had landed at Maaldrift in Holland, the brand new silver-plate B-29 had been secreted away on the edge of the large air base, shrouded in secrecy, permitting a small work team to work on further converting the already modified bomb bay.
On the 3rd of December, ‘Jenni Lee’ had made the short trip from Maaldrift, landing in total secrecy at Karup Airfield, Denmark.
Today, the B-29 was tasked with making a high altitude precision run against the city of Königsberg, not releasing, but testing the procedures for release for a city attack.
Once the attack practice run was complete, the weapon would be released on a small Soviet airbase at Baltiysk, where its six thousand, three hundred pounds of Composition B explosive filler was expected to do good work.
It was a pumpkin bomb, a device that resembled the real thing in every dimension and detail. Whilst the Pumpkin was a deadly device in its own right, the weapon it mimicked was far more lethal.
The bomb bay contained a substitute for an Atomic bomb.
“Navigator to Pilot. Standby for course change. Come right to 102° on my mark.”
The mission, when it came, would require pinpoint navigation, so it was practiced constantly.
“Navigator to Pilot, course 102°. On my mark… five… four… three… two… one… mark.”
The B-29 dropped its right wing as Barnes moved the ‘Jenni Lee’ onto a course of 102°, and a rendezvous with the city of Königsberg.
The rate of climb had slowed dramatically and Djorov levelled his Schwalbe out.
‘One-one-six-seven-five metres? Not bad at all!’
The new fuel had obviously done wonders.
It was the best he had achieved to date.
Perhaps the ground crew’s efforts at polishing the fuselage and lightening the load had also not been in vain.
His mouth split so wide in its grin that the smile might have been seen from the ground had it not been immediately terminated as a flash told Djorov that he was not alone.
The bombardier, Capt Philip Bradford, was one of the best in the business, which you had to be to get a foothold on one of the 63rd’s aircraft.
His Medal of Honor had helped, well earned during the horrendous second raid on Schweinfurt.
But his skill in the black art of dropping bombs was legendary, and the 63rd had come looking for him when it was first put together.
His cat like vision now came into play, and he saw the threat.
“Pilot, bomb aimer. Aircraft at 12 o’clock high. Type unknown, but he’s coming straight at us. Jeepers but he’s fast.”
The plan had been that any threat would result in a mission abort, and the thing that was closing, seemingly at the speed of light, was undoubtedly a threat.
“Radio, call the escort. Tell ’em we got company and get ’em up here fast.”
Barnes gripped the controls firmly, assessing the approaching aircraft, realising that it was growing unexpectedly larger with each passing second.
‘Jeez but he’s fast!’
“Gunners, pilot. We’ll pass him down our port side. Stay alert, cos he’s going like mustang that sat on a cactus!”
The words were hardly out of his mouth before the enemy aircraft had gone past.
Not a gun was fired.
“Port waist to Pilot. What the fuck is that thing?”
Port waist had spent his war fighting the Japanese, so had only heard tales about the Schwalbe.
The tail gunner had spent his time over Europe so was confident in his reply.
“Port waist, Tail. I confirm that as a Messerschmitt two-six-two turbojet fighter. Aircraft recognition needed lessons for you, Arnie!”
“Pilot to all positions, Keep it tight. What’s he doing, tail?”
“Coming round, big arc… round to our starboard side. He’s too fast. Reckon he’s a new boy, skipper.”
‘Incredible!’
Djorov had been flying the ME 262 Schwalbe for some time now, but never in combat, and the stresses, strains, and nuances, were very different.
He had made a hash of his direct attack and now, repeated the error in his efforts to attack the rear of the huge bomber.
As he struggled to sort out his manoeuvring issues, he went through the mental list he had recently read regarding the leviathan.
‘B-29 Superfortress, four engines… eleven crew… pressurized crew compartments for high altitude work… radar bombing sight… top speed three-fifty… something… errr…doesn’t matter… twelve to fourteen machine guns… up to ten thousand kilos of bombs… suka!’
His eyes caught movement and he concentrated on it, discovering four Mustangs rising up to meet him.
Still, he decided he had time for an attack, provided he could sort himself out.
“Tail, Pilot. He ain’t read the notes for sure. He can’t seem to get into an attack position.”
Barnes had seen the ME 262 streak past, heading back towards where it had come. Still not one shot had been fired by either side, but he was experienced enough to suspect that wouldn’t last.
“Crew, Pilot. I’m going to drop height and turn towards our fighter escort. No sense in staying up here now… and we are turning for home.”
The navigator had already fired off a position for the radio operator to report back, and now passed on the course needed to take them back to Karup.
‘Jenni Lee’ turned lazily and bled off height.
The Schwalbe flicked around to port. Djorov, conscious of the rising fighters, suddenly realized that the lumbering heavy bomber was in the perfect line before him.
Reacting quickly, Djorov decided to lose speed, something normally abhorrent to any fighter pilot.
The momentum took the Schwalbe forward, but the lessening of the throttle gave him a precious extra second of time to line up for a perfect shot.
The German aircraft was equipped with four Mk108 cannons, especially designed to knock American bombers out of the air.
Normally, only four hits out of its sixty six round capacity had been required to knock a B-17 from the sky.
The payback was that the range needed to be short and, for a fast mover like the 262, that brought other issues for the pilot.
Djorov thumbed the triggers, and the maschinen-kanone spat out a mix of 30mm HE and AP shells.
But only for a moment… and in that moment Djorov realized where his crew had made some extra weight savings.
Each kanone had only ten shells, and all of them were either in the air or buried inside the Superfortress.
He ignored the metallic thuds, reacted like a cobra, and tweaked his wing position so as not to collide with the tail plane of the huge bomber.
He streaked away, suddenly aware that the thuds had done something of note to his aircraft, the gauges for the right-hand turbojet all recording dramatic events within the cowling.