We was watching from the street over at Sixth Avenue, trying to get people from shoving each other in a panic. Then they calmed down as they was watching the dogfights and stuff up above.
Some birdwatcher had this pair of binocs, so I confiscated 'em. I watched pretty much the whole thing. Them jets wasn't having no luck, and the antiaircraft from over in the Bowery wasn't doing no good either. I still say the Army oughta be sued 'cause them Air Defense guys got so panicky they forgot to set the timers on them shells and I heard that some of them came down in the Bronx and blew up a whole block of apartments.
Anyway, this red plane, that is, Jetboy's plane, was climbing up and he fired all his bullets, I thought, without doing any damage to the balloon thing.
I was out on the street, and this fire truck pulls up with its sirens on, and the whole precinct and auxiliaries were on it, and the lieutenant was yelling for me to climb on, we'd been assigned to the west side to take care of a traffic smash-up and a riot.
So I jump on the truck, and I try to keep my eyes on what's happening up in the skies.
The riot was pretty much over. The air-raid sirens was still wailing, but everybody was just standing around gawking at what was happening up there.
The lieutenant yells to at least get the people in the buildings. I pushed a few in some doors, then I took another gander in the field glasses.
"I'll be damned if Jetboy hasn't shot up some of the balloons (I hear he used his howitzer on 'em) and the thing looks bigger-it's dropping some. But he's out of ammo and not as high as the thing is and he starts circlin'."
I forgot to say, all the time this blimp thing is got so many machine guns going it looks like a Fourth of July sparkler, and Jetboy's plane's taking these hits all the time.
Then he just takes his plane around and comes right back and crashes right into the what-you-call-it-the gondola, that's it, on the blimps. They just sort of merged together. He must have been going awful slow by then, like stalling, and the plane just sort of mashed into the side of the thing.
And the blimp deal looked like it was coming down a little, not a lot, just some. Then the lieutenant took the glasses away from me, and I shaded my eyes and watched as best I could.
There was this flare of light. I thought the whole thing had blown up at first, and I ducked up under a car. But when I looked up the blimps was still there.
"Look out! Get inside!" yelled the lieutenant. Everybody had another panic then, and was jumping under cars and around stuff and through windows. It looked like a regular Three Stooges for a minute or two.
A few minutes later, it rained red airplane parts all over the streets, and a bunch on the Hudson Terminal…
There was steam and fire all around. The cockpit cracked like an egg, and the wings folded up like a fan. Jetboy jerked as the capstans in the pressure suit inflated. He was curved into a circle, and must have looked like a frightened tomcat.
The gondola walls had parted like a curtain where the fighter's wings crumpled into it. A wave of frost formed over the shattered cockpit as oxygen blew out of the gondola.
Jetboy tore his hoses loose. His bailout bottle had five minutes of air in it. He grappled with the nose of the plane, like fighting against iron bands on his arms and legs. All you were supposed to be able to do in these suits was eject and pull the D-ring on your parachute.
The plane lurched like a freight elevator with a broken cable. Jetboy grabbed a radar antenna with one gloved hand, felt it snap away from the broken nose of the plane. He grabbed another.
The city was twelve miles below him, the buildings making the island look like a faraway porcupine. The left engine of his plane, crumpled and spewing fuel, tore loose and flew under the gondola. He watched it grow smaller.
The air was purple as a plum-the skin of the blimps brut as fire in the sunlight, and the sides of the gondola bent an torn like cheap cardboard.
The whole thing shuddered like a whale.
Somebody flew by over Jetboy's head through the hole in the metal, trailing hoses like the arms of an octopus. Debris followed through the air in the explosive decompression. The jet sagged.
Jetboy thrust his hand into the torn side of the gondola, found a strut.
He felt his parachute harness catch on the radar array. The plane twisted. He felt its weight.
He jerked his harness snap. His parachute packs were ripped away from him, tearing at his back and crotch.
His plane bent in the middle like a snake with a broken back, then dropped away, the wings coming up and touching above the shattered cockpit as if it were a dove trying to beat its pinions. Then it twisted sideways, falling to pieces.
Below it was the dot of the man who had fallen out of the gondola, spinning like a yard sprinkler toward the bright city below.
Jetboy saw the plane fall away beneath his feet. He hung in space twelve miles up by one hand.
He gripped his right wrist with his left hand, chinned himself up until he got a foot through the side, then punched his way in.
There were two people left inside. One was at the controls, the other stood in the center behind a large round thing. He was pushing a cylinder into a slot in it. There was a shattered machine-gun turret on one side of the gondola.
Jetboy reached for the service. 38 strapped across his chest. It was agony reaching for it, agony trying to run toward the guy with the fuse.
Thewore diving suits. The suits were inflated. They looked like ten or twelve beach balls stuffed into suits of long underwear. They were moving as slowly as he was.
Jetboy's hands closed in a claw over the handle of the. 38. He jerked it from its holster.
It flew out of his hand, bounced of the ceiling, and went out through the hole he had come in.
The guy at the controls got off one shot at him. He dived toward the other man, the one with the fuse.
His hand clamped on the diving-suited wrist of the other just as the man pushed the cylindrical fuse into the side of the round canister. Jetboy saw that the whole device sat on a hinged doorplate.
The man had only half a face-Jetboy saw smooth metal on one side through the grid-plated diving helmet.
The man twisted the fuse with both hands.
Through the torn ceiling of the pilothouse, Jetboy saw another blimp begin to deflate. There was a falling sensation. They were dropping toward the city.
Jetboy gripped the fuse with both hands. Their helmets clanged together as the ship lurched.
The guy at the controls was putting on a parachute harness and heading toward the rent in the wall.
Another shudder threw Jetboy and the man with the fuse together. The guy reached for the door lever behind him as best he could in the bulky suit.
Jetboy grabbed his hands and pulled him back.
They slammed together, draped over the canister, their hands entangled on each other's suits and the fuse to the bomb. The man tried again to reach the lever. Jetboy pulled him away. The canister rolled like a giant beach ball as the gondola listed.
He looked directly into the eye of the man in the diving suit. The man used his feet to push the canister back over the bomb door. His hand went for the lever again.
Jetboy gave the fuse a half-twist the other way.
The man in the diving suit reached behind him. He came up with a. 45 automatic. He jerked a heavy gloved hand away from the fuse, worked the slide. Jetboy saw the muzzle swing at him.
"Die, Jetboyl Diel" said the man. He pulled the trigger four times.
Statement of Patrolman Francis V O'Hooey, Sept. 15, 1946, 6:45 PM. (continued).
So when the pieces of metal quit falling, we all ran out and looked up.
I saw the white dot below the blimp thing. I grabbed the binocs away from the lieutenant.
Sure enough, it was a parachute. I hoped it was.
Jetboy had bailed out when his plane crashed into the thing.
I don't know much about such stuff, but I do know that you don't open a parachute that high up or you get in serious trouble.
Then, while I was watching, the blimps and stuff all blew up, all at once. Like they was there, then there was this explosion, and there was only smoke and stuff way up in the air.