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+
+*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 76617 ***
+
+
+Outnumbered, His Pilot Shot, and Himself Wounded, His Plane
+ Hurtling to Death, the Old Sergeant Kept Up that Grim,
+ Bitter Stream of Live, Whining, Killing Lead!
+
+[Illustration: Biplanes in aerial combat]
+
+
+
+
+TOO OLD TO FLY
+
+By IVAN MARCH
+
+
+Sergeant Galladay learned to shoot a machine gun “from the rear end of a
+mule.” That was the old marine corps phrase to describe a gunner who
+learned all the tricks of his trade in the jungles and brush of
+“spiggoty land.”
+
+Quite obviously such a leatherneck was not to be mentioned in the same
+breath with a fellow who acquired his knowledge of projectory, windage,
+recoil and assemblage, safe in the lecture room or gun pits of Paris
+Island.
+
+The grammar-school education of Sergeant Horatio Galladay--then Private
+Galladay--took place in the Spanish-American War, and his textbook was a
+many-barreled Gatling gun he turned with a crank. Given plenty of
+ammunition and a large enough target, Private Galladay caused plenty of
+damage while he learned. His high-school course was in the Philippines,
+followed by a college degree of D. B. W.--Doctor of Bushwhacking.
+
+For a diploma he received the navy cross for distinguished service, his
+sergeant’s chevrons and a letter from the secretary of the navy,
+complimenting him upon the diligence with which he had pursued his
+studies--and the enemy.
+
+During that island campaign Sergeant Galladay served as the unwilling
+carving block for an artistically inclined Moro chieftain. His machine
+gun had jammed and the entire contents of his army model .38 Colt failed
+to stop the maddened charge of the brown man, who danced forward, his
+black eyes fixed gleefully on Galladay’s midriff, his bolo knife cutting
+anticipatory patterns in the air.
+
+Silent as the death which he was facing, Sergeant Galladay dropped the
+Moro at last with a straight right to the jaw, but in the meantime the
+tribesman had carved his initials several times on Horatio Galladay’s
+anatomy. The men of Company B found him weak in his own blood but still
+cursing the jammed machine gun which he loved with a blaspheming love.
+
+For fear that Sergeant Galladay might forget what he had already learned
+about the tricks of machine guns and to keep him abreast of the times in
+his fine art, a philanthropic government at Washington managed to find
+perennial fracases in various far-flung corners of the world where a
+good machine gunner was worth his weight in gold.
+
+He chased cacos through the jungles and up the mountains of Haiti; he
+crooned to his gun in San Domingo, Nicaragua, China and other places not
+so well marked on the map. And he acquired, during this post-graduate
+work, a marvelous knowledge of malaria fever, native liquor and
+man-eating insects. In addition, during the occupation of Vera Cruz, he
+earned two bullet wounds through his left leg, which ached abominably in
+wet weather, and a flattened nose from the gentle caress of a mule’s
+right hind foot.
+
+The entrance of the United States in the World War found the
+battle-scarred veteran eligible for a professorship in his favorite
+subject. Some one in Washington remembered the sergeant, thought twice
+of his stocky, erect figure, his legs bowed by the weight of the guns he
+had carried, his cold, blue eyes which had taken on the glint of the
+metal barrels he had squinted down so often, thought once more of all
+the knowledge and practical experience in that grizzled head. “Just the
+man to teach the fine art of machine gunnery to the marine ‘boots,’”
+General Somebody decided. Forthwise, Sergeant Horatio Galladay was
+ordered to Paris Island.
+
+Sergeant Galladay went. But he didn’t stay. Thirty minutes after his
+arrival he marched up to the commanding officer’s desk and snapped to
+attention, his square jaw thrust forward belligerently and his eyes
+firing two hundred shots a minute.
+
+“Hello, ‘Hod’!” greeted the C. O., grinning his pleasure at seeing the
+sergeant again. As a matter of past history, there had been a torrid day
+in the Philippines when Sergeant Galladay’s bullet-spitting music box
+had saved the C. O.’s little company from being wiped off the earth.
+“Hello, Sergeant Galladay!” he added more severely, for he saw trouble
+in the gunner’s cold eyes.
+
+“’Lo, colonel!” grunted Galladay.
+
+“Well, well, what’s the trouble now?” And the C. O. began to turn over
+the foot-high stack of paper work. “Suppose you want to go straight to
+France, eh? Be shooting up the German high command by to-morrow night,
+eh? Just like the rest of----”
+
+“Right!” barked Sergeant Galladay.
+
+“Listen, sergeant,” reasoned the C. O. placatingly, “we’ve got something
+better than that for you. Sure! We’re going to give you a commission.
+Yes, sir, a commission! And put you in charge of machine-gun
+instruction. How’s that, old-timer? A commission and----”
+
+“Commission be damned!” burred Hod Galladay. “Begging your pardon,
+colonel. Look here, sir. I’ve been fooling around in these half-pint
+spigotty wars for twenty-five years. Now when a real war comes along you
+try to give me a trick commission and shelve me away ‘training boots’!
+Is it fair? No, it ain’t! Now get this! My hitch in this man’s service
+is up in six weeks. Six weeks! And if I don’t get a promise of action
+pronto I’ll quit. Quit cold, unless I join up with them Germans, maybe.”
+
+The C. O. reached for his pipe and waved his hands helplessly. He sensed
+the utter futility of argument with the old leatherneck.
+
+“All right, all right, you old fire-eater,” he said soothingly. “We’ll
+just forget that teaching detail. Name your poison. What do you want to
+do?”
+
+“I want to sign up with the aviation. I hear they’re forming a marine
+aviation outfit. I want to fly.”
+
+“What?” The commanding officer’s jaw dropped open, the pipe fell from
+his mouth. He stared at Sergeant Galladay as if the latter were an
+escaped lunatic.
+
+“Good Lord, Galladay, you can’t sign up with the air service! Why, man,
+that’s a young fellow’s outfit--got to have a bunch of crazy kids. We’re
+setting the age limit at thirty and we’d rather have ’em around twenty.
+Say, how old are you, anyway?”
+
+“Forty-three,” lied Sergeant Galladay manfully.
+
+“Forty-three! Good Lord, that’s only thirteen years over the limit. Guess
+you better forget that fool aviation idea of yours, sergeant.”
+
+“Quit, then!” the leatherneck said.
+
+The commanding officer shook his head despairingly. These old-timers
+were damnably set in their ways. If they got an idea into their heads
+you couldn’t budge it--not with a three-inch field piece. The commanding
+officer reached for a memo pad.
+
+“Very well then, Galladay,” he sighed. “I’ll recommend that you be
+attached to this new air-force group. They’ll need some one to teach
+machine gunnery. But get this! They’ll assign you to that job and keep
+you on the ground for the duration of the war. Serve you right, too.”
+
+“Keep me on the ground?” grinned Sergeant Galladay. “Sure they
+will--like hell! Once I get set with that outfit I’ll be flying every
+ship they’ve got!” He snorted contemptuously. “Too old to fly! Say,
+colonel, just give you and me twenty men from the old C Company and we
+could swab up a whole regiment of these here young whipper-snappers
+they’re recruiting nowadays.”
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Sergeant Horatio Galladay thrust his head out of the door of the armory
+shack of the --th Marine Aviation Group, Ardres, France, just as a
+bombing squadron, returning from a daylight raid on the submarine base
+at Ostend, swept downward over the row of French poplars which lined the
+north end of the drome.
+
+“Four, five, six, seven,” Sergeant Galladay counted the returning planes
+as their wheels touched the field. “All present and accounted for.
+That’s good.”
+
+For eighteen months now he had watched the planes--not these particular
+planes, but ships varying from the old Canadian-rigged, Hispano-powered
+J. N. training planes and tricky, tail-heavy “Tommies” to these
+Liberty-motored De Haviland bombers; and always he got the same thrill,
+the same unsatisfied longing to fly when they took off, the same relief
+when they returned.
+
+He hadn’t flown over the enemy lines himself yet, but that wasn’t his
+fault. He had begged, pleaded, cursed, pulled wires--and all he got for
+it was a laugh and a glance at his grizzled head, a glance which said:
+“Too old to fly, old-timer--a young man’s game.” So he remained in
+charge of the noncommissioned machine gunners and the armory shop. True,
+by dint of threats and bribery he had managed to get a few joy rides and
+three of the pilots had even allowed him to handle the stick a bit. But
+when he requested permission to solo--
+
+Sergeant Galladay sighed as he turned back into the shack. He supposed
+he was too old--too cautious. It took the devil-may-care young-uns for
+air work. He looked very sad as he placed the Lewis gun he had been
+repairing back into its wooden case. For a moment or two he caressed the
+weapon absently, staring into space. Suddenly his shoulders went back,
+he pulled his fore-and-aft hat over the bald spot on his head and
+started for the door. His eyes glinted his determination. He’d try once
+more.
+
+The De Havilands were taxiing up to the camouflaged hangars which lined
+the field. Motors roared in staccato bursts. Lieutenant “Buck” Weaver,
+the flight leader, a blond, wind-tanned giant, brought his plane up to
+No. 1 hangar with a roar, cut the throttle and leaped out of the
+cockpit, leaving the motor idling. He felt a hand on his arm and turned.
+
+“Well, hello, Hod, old-timer!” he greeted Sergeant Galladay
+affectionately.
+
+“What luck?” demanded the sergeant.
+
+“Great! Six direct hits. And we picked off two Fokkers on the way home!
+Not bad, eh, Dad?”
+
+Sergeant Galladay scowled. He had helped to whip the tall, gawky recruit
+into a real soldier and now here he was with a commission, calling an
+old-timer “Dad”! Well, at that, the young pilot was a son of whom any
+real dad might be proud.
+
+“Yeah, Buck, suppose you’ll personally claim both them Boches,” Galladay
+said with heavy sarcasm. “And about five of them direct hits.” Suddenly
+his manner changed. He became mild, ingratiating, pleading. “Say, when
+you going to give me that ride over the lines you promised?”
+
+Lieutenant Weaver flashed a row of strong, white teeth; his young eyes
+smiled banteringly. “Any time, old-timer. How about this afternoon?
+We’ll get ‘Hap’ Johnston to go along with us in his bus for company.
+Suit you?”
+
+Little chills of excitement ran up and down Sergeant Galladay’s spine;
+he could feel the hair prickle at the back of his neck. At last he was
+going to fly over the lines! With an effort he controlled himself; his
+face was as expressionless as a wooden image.
+
+“Suits me fine,” he agreed. “I’ll be ready. What time?”
+
+“Oh, about four. We’ll take a little joy ride up to Nieuport and back.
+You’ll learn what antiaircraft is like, anyway. I want to be back early.
+Got a date for six thirty.”
+
+“You and your dates!” scoffed Galladay, for something to say.
+
+Impulsively Buck Weaver took the older man’s arm and led him toward
+headquarters. Buck was overflowing with sentiment; he must tell some
+one, and it couldn’t be his flying comrades for they’d laugh at him, kid
+him unmercifully. Yes, the thrill of the successful raid had increased
+his excitement and happiness; he must tell someone his secret or burst.
+Why not the tight-lipped old marine sergeant, Dad Galladay?
+
+“You know any of the WAAC _femmes_, Dad?” he asked in a low voice as he
+strode along.
+
+Galladay nodded his grizzled head; his mind was on the promised flight
+and he hadn’t half heard the flyer’s question.
+
+“Then mebbe you know Miss Childers?” Buck primed, and there was a
+suggestion of holy worship in his tone. “Ruth Childers?”
+
+The old sergeant shook his head. He was hoping that they’d meet eight or
+ten or twelve Boche planes that afternoon. He’d show ’em some plain and
+fancy shooting.
+
+“Well, you got to meet her,” Buck announced gravely. “She’s the most
+wonderful girl in the world, bar none. Ask me if she’s wonderful!”
+
+“I’ll let ’em have it like they never got it before,” Dad Galladay
+muttered.
+
+“We’re half engaged,” the handsome young lieutenant admitted in a
+whisper.
+
+“Which half?” asked Galladay, without thinking what he said.
+
+“Well, it’s like this,” Buck Weaver confessed naively. “She’ll marry me
+if I give up flying. Marry me.” He repeated the words and stuttered over
+them. “Only, of course, I can’t give up flying. Not now, anyway. So
+we’re half engaged and... Holy mackerel! Here she comes to meet me! Ask
+me, Dad, ask me, isn’t she the neatest, prettiest, nicest---- Ruth, this
+is Sergeant Galladay. Dad Galladay. Miss Childers, Dad.”
+
+Dad Galladay received a faint impression of a mass of golden-yellow hair
+escaping from a rakish little cap, of big blue eyes, a pink-and-white
+complexion and a smiling little mouth. He realized dimly that in front
+of him stood a girl with her hand outstretched, a very attractive girl,
+trim and graceful in her neat, brown uniform. Very faintly, too, he
+understood that the girl’s blue eyes were watching Buck Weaver with love
+akin to worship and her lips were smiling at the big, blond giant with
+marvelous tenderness. Sergeant Galladay took the little hand that was
+proffered him.
+
+“I’ll betcha I’ll get eight out of them ten Boche,” Dad promised
+inanely.
+
+Too late Buck Weaver kicked the sergeant’s ankle. The girl’s blue eyes
+had widened with sudden perturbation.
+
+“What’d you say?” she asked, and when the old sergeant stammered
+incoherently, she turned full on Weaver. “Allington,” she pleaded with
+half a sob in her voice, “you aren’t going to fly again to-day, are you?
+Oh, you won’t, will you? Not when you don’t have to. You don’t know how
+I worry when you’re out. It makes me almost sick and----”
+
+“Oh, shoot!” scoffed Buck Weaver. “I just promised Dad a little joy
+ride, that’s all. Just up to Nieuport and back. We won’t make any
+contacts. Sure we won’t. I just want to show him how the antiaircraft
+work. He’s been hounding me to death for four months now and I got to do
+it.”
+
+“But----” protested the girl.
+
+“I got to keep my promise, haven’t I?” Buck Weaver insisted. “You
+needn’t worry. Honest, we’ll scoot home at the first sign of Boche.
+Honest, I will, Ruth.”
+
+Ruth Childers had taken the hands of the big aviator and was staring up
+into his bronzed face.
+
+“All right, Buck,” she said. “This time.”
+
+Buck flashed a grin over his shoulder to old Dad Galladay who stood
+there awkwardly enough, shifting from one foot to the other, still
+thinking about the eight Boche planes he was going to bring down out of
+the ten he was already fighting in his imagination.
+
+“See you at four, Dad,” Buck announced. “_Toute suite._”
+
+“Sure!” called Galladay, and as an afterthought: “Say, Miss Childers,
+you needn’t worry about Buck this afternoon. I’ll bring him home O. K.
+Sure I will.”
+
+The two young people strolled away arm in arm, leaving the old marine
+sergeant standing there and staring after them. But he wasn’t wondering
+about young love at all; in his mind he was already pressing the trigger
+of a Lewis machine gun, soaring high in the air and engaging ten huge
+enemy planes at once.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Four o’clock found the planes of Buck Weaver and Hap Johnston gassed,
+oiled, ready and on the line. Sergeant Galladay had seen to it that the
+motors were tuned up like Swiss watches. For the last hour the old war
+dog, dressed in a borrowed flying suit which was considerably too big
+for him, had been adjusting and readjusting the double Lewises in the
+gunner’s cockpit of plane No. 1. Meantime Corporal O’Hara seated in the
+other plane, was offering unheeded advice to the old-timer.
+
+“If we run into any Boche don’t get buck fever like I did first time,
+sergeant!” he shouted. “Yes, sir, I sat there and couldn’t fire a single
+shot. Not for the life of me. Now don’t get that way, sergeant. Just
+swing on ’em like you were shooting ducks. Throw the tracers at ’em and
+keep pouring ’em in.”
+
+“Say, who learned you how to shoot, kid?” Sergeant Galladay snorted
+contemptuously. “Didn’t I have to show you which end of a gun the
+bullets came from? Kid, I was shooting off’n the rear end of a mule while
+you was cutting teeth. Now you know it all just because you happened to
+knock down a Boche plane or two! Me get buck fever! Say, I expect to get
+eight out of ten, at least!”
+
+O’Hara grinned, “All right, old-timer! Only better men than you have had
+it and---- Here comes our two guys. Say, them two babies are the best
+pilots in the outfit, sergeant. The Heinies know it, too, and if they
+weren’t scared clean out of the air they’d be on our tails this
+afternoon.”
+
+Galladay was deaf to everything except the beating of his own heart. He
+shouted to a mechanic to “twist her tail” and the motor was running long
+before Buck Weaver reached the plane.
+
+“Feel a bit shaky, dad?” the pilot asked as he climbed into the cockpit.
+“Most everybody does the first trip over.”
+
+Sergeant Galladay shook his head. “Not a bit shaky, son,” he lied. “Say,
+listen, this airplane stuff is tame compared with the old days.”
+
+Pilot Weaver grinned and pushed open the throttle until the tachometer
+registered fourteen hundred revolutions, listened intently to the motor,
+wiggle-waggled his controls and nodded his satisfaction.
+
+“All right! Pull the blocks!”
+
+Two waiting mechanics removed the heavy wooden blocks in front of the
+wheels. Weaver taxied to the middle of the field, brought the plane to
+the wind and gave her the gun. The Liberty motor roared, spitting fire
+from the exhaust manifolds; slowly the big De Haviland crept forward,
+gathered speed, skimmed over the ground, bumped gently twice, and leaped
+into the air.
+
+Around the field the plane circled until the hangars became little
+camouflaged ant hills and the row of poplars behind them were like
+miniature nursery trees. Still climbing, Weaver swung his plane toward
+the coast. Sergeant Galladay could see the English Channel and the port
+of Calais with the shipping in the harbor like little toy boats. Then he
+noticed that Weaver had turned his head and was grinning at him. The
+machine gunner, exultant as a viking in the prow of a pirate ship, waved
+his hand and grinned back.
+
+Weaver continued to hold the plane’s nose up, and the altimeter on the
+instrument board indicated twelve thousand feet when she passed over
+Dunkirk. Beyond that point lay the skeleton houses of the ruined town of
+Furnes, and the blackened scar stretching to the eastern horizon which
+was the Flanders front.
+
+Sergeant Galladay peered over the side of the cockpit and scrutinized
+the ruined landscape below with awed eyes. By glory, they’d made a mess
+of it down there, he thought. A hell of a way to fight a war--men up to
+their necks in mud in those zigzagged lines of trenches. Day by day,
+month by month, hot as hell, cold as Iceland, penned up like rats in
+their holes, pecking at each other with machine guns and rifles,
+throwing hand grenades, waiting for a big shell with the right number to
+blow up a whole squad.
+
+Sergeant Galladay recalled the old, wild, free days in the
+Philippines--Haiti--Cuba. Fever, snakes, and big tropical ticks there
+were in plenty--and action, too. But it had been every man for himself
+there and lots of territory to cover--not this rat-trap warfare.
+
+The Germans weren’t paying any attention to the American planes at all.
+Where the devil was the Archie--the German antiaircraft?
+
+_Whomp! Woof! Woof!_
+
+As if in answer to his wonder the German batteries surrounding the town
+of Nieuport sent up a welcoming barrage of high explosive shells--little
+clouds of black, dirty smoke which barked at the planes like ferocious
+dogs. Chains of flaming “onions” drifted upward lazily toward the two
+allied planes. Sergeant Galladay’s heart leaped wildly. He was actually
+over the lines now, really flying above German territory. It was the
+realization of a dream, a realization which found him strangely shaken
+and breathless.
+
+Weaver turned and grinned again, then signaled to Johnston who was in
+their rear. The two planes headed back toward the allied lines.
+
+The antiaircraft was still banging away at them, but there didn’t seem
+to be a German plane in the sky. Oddly enough, Sergeant Galladay, for
+all his former anticipation and bloodthirsty threats, wasn’t sorry. It
+was a lot different away up there in the sky than it had been in the
+good old days down on terra firma with trees to hide behind and plenty
+of ammunition and a good machine gun set up on a tripod. Down there he
+was in his element; sky-high, he felt impotent, vulnerable, old. His
+mind drifted back to that day years ago when he had had the battle with
+the Moro chieftain and again to the storming of Vera Cruz. There a man
+had a chance and----
+
+_Zip--zip--zip!_
+
+Three white streaks cut past Sergeant Galladay’s left shoulder. He
+glanced upward, an oath of surprise on his lips. Three little planes
+with black crosses painted on their wings had appeared out of nowhere
+and were diving on the De Haviland, their guns gibbering death. Tracer
+bullets cut through the wing fabric. A panel strut not six inches from
+Lieutenant Weaver’s right ear flew into splinters. Sergeant Galladay
+stood braced in the gunner’s cockpit as if paralyzed, his mouth open,
+his eyes bulging, his guns forgotten, too surprised to move, even to
+think.
+
+Buck Weaver was thinking fast enough for two. He had counted on Galladay
+to keep close watch from behind and the attack had taken him completely
+by surprise, but he was young enough to react with lightning rapidity.
+Full motor he gave the De Haviland and banked it into a steep, climbing
+turn. He was endeavoring to shake the Fokkers off his tail and to bring
+his own fixed guns to bear, but the Germans were no novices. The leader
+zoomed upward and the other two circled right and left and dived again.
+
+Weaver glanced quickly around him, hoping for support. To his right Hap
+Johnston was having troubles of his own, a private little dog fight with
+two other Fokkers. There was no help there, no help anywhere, only the
+three enemy Fokkers attacking from three directions, converging their
+fire.
+
+Desperately Buck Weaver dived, twisting the plane like a snipe in
+flight, but the Germans’ fire continued to find its mark. Bullets ripped
+through the fuselage, tore at the wings, splintered the struts. One cut
+Weaver’s sleeve and a second later another struck him in the shoulder,
+shattering it. He cried out, but strove valiantly to keep control of his
+plane.
+
+Old Sergeant Galladay saw it all happen with wide, fear-haunted eyes. He
+hadn’t made a move, hadn’t fired a shot. He seemed paralyzed--a statue
+of a man. Now the De Haviland nosed over into a vertical dive. With a
+supreme effort Buck Weaver straightened up and momentarily righted the
+plunging plane.
+
+“Dad! For God’s sake, heads up!” he screamed.
+
+Sergeant Galladay couldn’t hear the words but the agonized look on
+Weaver’s face struck him like a dash of cold water, startled him back
+into reality as if from a nightmare. His mind, which had been stricken
+numb, suddenly began to race like the motor. The predicament he had
+created flashed in a searing flame across his brain. Buck fever! He, the
+old-timer, veteran of a dozen campaigns had been stricken with buck
+fever like the rawest recruit! But not for long. No, sir! Hadn’t he
+promised that yellow-haired girl to bring her man back safe and sound?
+Hadn’t he? And here was her man, good old Buck Weaver, in desperate
+straits.
+
+With the quickness of a cat the old sergeant bent low in the cockpit and
+swung his guns to bear on the nearest Fokker. Emboldened by the apparent
+defenselessness of the De Haviland, the German plane was diving straight
+upon its prey.
+
+“Damn you! Damn you!” Dad Galladay screamed. “Shoot the kid, will you?
+Well, I’ll get you for that!”
+
+_Rat--tat--tat--tat!_
+
+The double Lewises jabbered staccato death. Tracer bullets streaked
+upward. Sergeant Galladay saw them pour into the fuselage of the
+Fokker, saw the plane lurch into a spin, motor full on. That was all
+he needed to see in that quarter. In a flash he swung his guns to bear
+on the Fokker to the right. The German, observing the fate of his
+companion, desperately whipped his plane into an Immelman turn. Again
+Galladay’s double Lewises jabbered one short burst, but the bullets
+went wild and the sergeant swore coldly, violently, at his own
+marksmanship.
+
+Buck Weaver, weakened and dazed by loss of blood, fighting back the
+blackness of unconsciousness, sat bolt upright in the front cockpit and
+the De Haviland flew as if a mechanical man were at the controls--flew a
+level course without effort to maneuver, without effort to escape. It
+was an invitation to the two remaining German planes. They circled and
+dived again, one from each side, meaning to strike the death blow to
+this stubborn American plane and the American ace.
+
+Crouched low in the gunner’s cockpit, Sergeant Galladay waited. The
+Fokkers were already firing. A burst of bullets ripped through the
+De Haviland’s tail assembly; one glanced off the gun barrel not six
+inches from the old sergeant’s head, but still he withheld his fire.
+Buck Weaver cried out again. His leg was shattered this time.
+
+“Dad! Dad!” he shouted. “I’m going--going----” His voice ceased, but his
+white lips slowly formed two other words: “Ruth--good-by----”
+
+Dad Galladay was sighting along the barrels of the double Lewises,
+waiting, waiting. He could see the German pilot on the right peering
+over the side of the plane and it seemed to him that the man was
+laughing.
+
+“Laugh, will you?” he muttered. “All right, laugh now!” He aimed high,
+allowing for distance. It was a long shot but he had made as hard ones
+before in his life. He pressed the trigger.
+
+_Rat--tat--tat--tat!_
+
+The Fokker lurched sidewise, hesitated a moment; then, in slow, lazy
+circles it swung downward, the pilot hanging over the side of his
+cockpit.
+
+Dad Galladay shook his fist at the doomed plane. “Next!” he shouted.
+“Who’s next? Bring on your whole damned air force! We licked them, eh,
+Buck, my boy?”
+
+But Buck Weaver did not hear the shouted words. A black veil, spotted
+with crimson dots, was closing down over his eyes. He felt tired, very
+tired. Slowly he slumped down in his seat. The pilotless plane nosed
+over into a dive.
+
+Dad Galladay, clinging to his guns, at first thought that the sudden
+dive was a maneuver of Buck Weaver’s. Then some inner sense warned him.
+One glance at the front cockpit told him the desperate state of affairs.
+Weaver was “out”; the plane was going down out of control. Just then
+something stung the old gunner in the leg. He glanced upward. The third
+Fokker, fearing a ruse or wishing to make sure of his kill, was
+following the American plane down, pouring lead into it. The German was
+so sure of his prey that he was making not the slightest effort to
+protect his own plane.
+
+“Gotta get him!” Sergeant Galladay told himself. Once more he squinted
+along the barrels of his double weapon until the sights were on the
+vital section of the German plane. “Gotta get him!”
+
+He pressed the trigger, felt the beloved vibration of his machine guns.
+But the plunging plane destroyed his aim and the bullets flew wild.
+Cursing, he pressed the trigger again. The guns fired
+twice--_put-put!_--and were silent. Out of ammunition! With the
+swiftness of a magician, the deftness of a card shark, Dad Galladay
+whipped a pan of cartridges from the rack at his side and fitted it on
+the guns. None too soon, either. The German plane was not thirty yards
+distant. Without aiming, almost instinctively, he threw the muzzles of
+the guns at the German and pressed the trigger. Above him the Fokker
+wavered; it burst into flames; it shrieked earthward.
+
+The American plane was in little better circumstances. It, too, seemed
+utterly doomed. It had gone into a tailspin now, the fuselage whipping
+around viciously. A dozen more turns and the structure, weakened by
+German bullets, would fly to pieces. The earth where the flaming German
+lay was racing up at an incredible rate. Nearer, nearer--a matter of a
+few hundred feet now, a few seconds--and then eternity.
+
+Sergeant Galladay snatched the auxiliary control stick from its brackets
+in the gunner’s cockpit; unerringly he thrust it into the socket which
+connected with the auxiliary controls. His motions were cool, precise,
+his blue eyes were icy cold. And his mind, working with that incredible
+swiftness which sometimes precedes death, recorded impressions as the
+whirling tape of a moving-picture camera records pictures--Buck Weaver’s
+lifeless, bobbing head, the flaming skeleton of the German plane, a
+trench with men in pot-shaped helmets peering upward, a dead man on the
+barbed wire in front of the crowded trench.
+
+He pulled the stick back gently. A weakened flying wire snapped like a
+tightened harp string. Every strut, every member of the wounded plane
+screamed under the stress. Would she stand it? Would she fly to pieces?
+And then gracefully the De Haviland righted itself, barely above ground,
+just over the heads of those white-faced men in the queer, zigzag
+trench.
+
+A shout sounded, a strange mingling of exultation and savage battle cry.
+Dad Galladay, “too old to fly,” was soloing at last! Soloing over No
+Man’s Land, with a wounded pilot in the front cockpit!
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Lieutenant Buck Weaver sat propped up in bed in the convalescent ward of
+a Belgian hospital, just behind the front lines. Around him lingered a
+faint aroma of perfume and his eyes were fixed upon the door through
+which Ruth Childers had just left.
+
+Suddenly the doorway framed a wheel chair in which sat Sergeant
+Galladay. His face was as red as ever and contrasted vividly with the
+white sheets and white walls of the ward; his grizzled hair rose
+stubbornly around his bald spot. At sight of Buck Weaver the cold, blue
+eyes of the old sergeant seemed to become several degrees warmer.
+
+He pushed his wheel chair forward rapidly with his hands until he was
+beside Buck’s bed, and for a long moment the two sat close, grinning
+sheepishly at each other.
+
+“Well, I reckon I better congratulate you,” Sergeant Galladay said at
+last. He threw a stubby thumb toward the door. “I met her outside.”
+
+“What did she tell you?” demanded Buck Weaver, his face beaming.
+
+“Aw----”
+
+“About the congressional medal of honor you have been recommended for,
+eh?”
+
+“Medal be damned!” burred Sergeant Galladay. “She--she kissed me. I
+reckon that was for bringing you back alive, eh?”
+
+“And all the time you had those two bullets in you.”
+
+“Aw,” protested Sergeant Galladay, “I never felt ’em. I was too scared
+to feel ’em.”
+
+“Yes, you were!”
+
+For a moment more there was silence, broken again by Sergeant Galladay.
+“I reckon you aren’t half engaged any more,” he said, fingering the
+blanket which was wrapped around his legs. “I reckon you’re all engaged,
+eh?”
+
+“Yes, Dad,” Weaver said reverentially. “She’s the finest, sweetest,
+prettiest, nicest----”
+
+“Tell that to the newspapers,” interrupted Sergeant Galladay brusquely.
+“I heard it all once before, anyway.” He pointed an accusing finger at
+the young flyer. “Say! I bet you promised her to give up flyin’--get
+transferred to the damn infantry or somethin’! Didn’t yuh?”
+
+Buck Weaver nodded, but the spasm of mingled disgust and indignation
+which twisted the old-timer’s face caused him to burst out laughing.
+
+“It isn’t so bad as all that, Dad,” he chuckled. “We compromised. I
+promised never to climb into a ship again--after the war.”
+
+The expression of righteous indignation on Dad Galladay’s face faded to
+a sheepish grin. Suddenly his eyes hardened, blue metal between two
+slits. In his imagination his wheel chair became the gunner’s cockpit of
+a battle plane, the crutch across his lap a machine gun. Buck Weaver was
+in the pilot’s cockpit; twenty Boche fighting planes were swooping down
+upon them. Dad Galladay waved the crutch wildly.
+
+“Bang! Bang! Bang!” he shouted gleefully. “Take that, and that, and
+that!”
+
+A water bottle on the bed table was knocked to the floor. Its thud
+brought Sergeant Galladay back to earth, and the wheel chair became a
+wheel chair, the crutch merely a crutch. Dad Galladay leaned over and
+touched Buck Weaver on the arm.
+
+“Say, Buck, old-timer,” he confided in an awed voice, “we’ll sure give
+’em hell when we’re out of here and flying together, eh?” His voice
+dropped. “Gosh, it ain’t hardly fair, Buck. No, sir, it ain’t right.
+We’re jest too damn good for them Heinies.”
+
+
+[Transcriber’s Notes:
+ 1. This story appeared in The Popular Magazine, November 7, 1929.
+ 2. Author consistenly used "De Haviland" to describe "De Havilland".
+ 3. "Paris Island" is the original name of what is now "Parris Island"
+]
+
+
+
+*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 76617 ***
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+<div style='text-align:center'>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 76617 ***</div>
+
+<div class='tac fs09 mt01' style='width:74%; margin-left:13%;'>
+Outnumbered, His Pilot Shot, and Himself Wounded, His Plane
+Hurtling to Death, the Old Sergeant Kept Up that Grim,
+Bitter Stream of Live, Whining, Killing Lead!
+</div>
+
+<div style="text-align: center; margin-top:0.5em;">
+ <img src="images/illus-fpc.jpg" alt="biplanes in air combat" style="width: 70%;" />
+</div>
+
+<h1>TOO OLD TO FLY</h1>
+
+<div class='tac mb10'>By IVAN MARCH</div>
+
+<p>Sergeant Galladay learned to shoot a machine gun “from the rear end of a
+mule.” That was the old marine corps phrase to describe a gunner who learned
+all the tricks of his trade in the jungles and brush of “spiggoty land.”</p>
+
+<p>Quite obviously such a leatherneck was not to be mentioned in the same breath
+with a fellow who acquired his knowledge of projectory, windage, recoil and
+assemblage, safe in the lecture room or gun pits of Paris Island.</p>
+
+<p>The grammar-school education of Sergeant Horatio Galladay&mdash;then Private
+Galladay&mdash;took place in the Spanish-American War, and his textbook was a
+many-barreled Gatling gun he turned with a crank. Given plenty of ammunition
+and a large enough target, Private Galladay caused plenty of damage while he
+learned. His high-school course was in the Philippines, followed by a college
+degree of D. B. W.&mdash;Doctor of Bushwhacking.</p>
+
+<p>For a diploma he received the navy cross for distinguished service, his
+sergeant’s chevrons and a letter from the secretary of the navy, complimenting
+him upon the diligence with which he had pursued his studies&mdash;and the enemy.</p>
+
+<p>During that island campaign Sergeant Galladay served as the unwilling carving
+block for an artistically inclined Moro chieftain. His machine gun had jammed
+and the entire contents of his army model .38 Colt failed to stop the maddened
+charge of the brown man, who danced forward, his black eyes fixed gleefully on
+Galladay’s midriff, his bolo knife cutting anticipatory patterns in the air.</p>
+
+<p>Silent as the death which he was facing, Sergeant Galladay dropped the Moro at
+last with a straight right to the jaw, but in the meantime the tribesman had
+carved his initials several times on Horatio Galladay’s anatomy. The men of
+Company B found him weak in his own blood but still cursing the jammed machine
+gun which he loved with a blaspheming love.</p>
+
+<p>For fear that Sergeant Galladay might forget what he had already learned about
+the tricks of machine guns and to keep him abreast of the times in his fine
+art, a philanthropic government at Washington managed to find perennial
+fracases in various far-flung corners of the world where a good machine gunner
+was worth his weight in gold.</p>
+
+<p>He chased cacos through the jungles and up the mountains of Haiti; he crooned
+to his gun in San Domingo, Nicaragua, China and other places not so well
+marked on the map. And he acquired, during this post-graduate work, a
+marvelous knowledge of malaria fever, native liquor and man-eating insects. In
+addition, during the occupation of Vera Cruz, he earned two bullet wounds
+through his left leg, which ached abominably in wet weather, and a flattened
+nose from the gentle caress of a mule’s right hind foot.</p>
+
+<p>The entrance of the United States in the World War found the battle-scarred
+veteran eligible for a professorship in his favorite subject. Some one in
+Washington remembered the sergeant, thought twice of his stocky, erect figure,
+his legs bowed by the weight of the guns he had carried, his cold, blue eyes
+which had taken on the glint of the metal barrels he had squinted down so
+often, thought once more of all the knowledge and practical experience in that
+grizzled head. “Just the man to teach the fine art of machine gunnery to the
+marine ‘boots,’” General Somebody decided. Forthwise, Sergeant Horatio
+Galladay was ordered to Paris Island.</p>
+
+<p>Sergeant Galladay went. But he didn’t stay. Thirty minutes after his arrival
+he marched up to the commanding officer’s desk and snapped to attention, his
+square jaw thrust forward belligerently and his eyes firing two hundred shots
+a minute.</p>
+
+<p>“Hello, ‘Hod’!” greeted the C. O., grinning his pleasure at seeing the
+sergeant again. As a matter of past history, there had been a torrid day in
+the Philippines when Sergeant Galladay’s bullet-spitting music box had saved
+the C. O.’s little company from being wiped off the earth. “Hello, Sergeant
+Galladay!” he added more severely, for he saw trouble in the gunner’s cold
+eyes.</p>
+
+<p>“’Lo, colonel!” grunted Galladay.</p>
+
+<p>“Well, well, what’s the trouble now?” And the C. O. began to turn over the
+foot-high stack of paper work. “Suppose you want to go straight to France, eh?
+Be shooting up the German high command by to-morrow night, eh? Just like the
+rest of&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
+
+<p>“Right!” barked Sergeant Galladay.</p>
+
+<p>“Listen, sergeant,” reasoned the C. O. placatingly, “we’ve got something
+better than that for you. Sure! We’re going to give you a commission. Yes,
+sir, a commission! And put you in charge of machine-gun instruction. How’s
+that, old-timer? A commission and&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
+
+<p>“Commission be damned!” burred Hod Galladay. “Begging your pardon, colonel.
+Look here, sir. I’ve been fooling around in these half-pint spigotty wars for
+twenty-five years. Now when a real war comes along you try to give me a trick
+commission and shelve me away ‘training boots’! Is it fair? No, it ain’t! Now
+get this! My hitch in this man’s service is up in six weeks. Six weeks! And if
+I don’t get a promise of action pronto I’ll quit. Quit cold, unless I join up
+with them Germans, maybe.”</p>
+
+<p>The C. O. reached for his pipe and waved his hands helplessly. He sensed the
+utter futility of argument with the old leatherneck.</p>
+
+<p>“All right, all right, you old fire-eater,” he said soothingly. “We’ll just
+forget that teaching detail. Name your poison. What do you want to do?”</p>
+
+<p>“I want to sign up with the aviation. I hear they’re forming a marine aviation
+outfit. I want to fly.”</p>
+
+<p>“What?” The commanding officer’s jaw dropped open, the pipe fell from his
+mouth. He stared at Sergeant Galladay as if the latter were an escaped
+lunatic.</p>
+
+<p>“Good Lord, Galladay, you can’t sign up with the air service! Why, man, that’s
+a young fellow’s outfit&mdash;got to have a bunch of crazy kids. We’re setting the
+age limit at thirty and we’d rather have ’em around twenty. Say, how old are
+you, anyway?”</p>
+
+<p>“Forty-three,” lied Sergeant Galladay manfully.</p>
+
+<p>“Forty-three! Good Lord, that’s only thirteen years over the limit. Guess you
+better forget that fool aviation idea of yours, sergeant.”</p>
+
+<p>“Quit, then!” the leatherneck said.</p>
+
+<p>The commanding officer shook his head despairingly. These old-timers were
+damnably set in their ways. If they got an idea into their heads you couldn’t
+budge it&mdash;not with a three-inch field piece. The commanding officer reached
+for a memo pad.</p>
+
+<p>“Very well then, Galladay,” he sighed. “I’ll recommend that you be attached
+to this new air-force group. They’ll need some one to teach machine gunnery.
+But get this! They’ll assign you to that job and keep you on the ground for
+the duration of the war. Serve you right, too.”</p>
+
+<p>“Keep me on the ground?” grinned Sergeant Galladay. “Sure they will&mdash;like
+hell! Once I get set with that outfit I’ll be flying every ship they’ve got!”
+He snorted contemptuously. “Too old to fly! Say, colonel, just give you and me
+twenty men from the old C Company and we could swab up a whole regiment of
+these here young whipper-snappers they’re recruiting nowadays.”</p>
+
+<div style='height:1em;'></div>
+
+<p>Sergeant Horatio Galladay thrust his head out of the door of the armory shack
+of the &mdash;th Marine Aviation Group, Ardres, France, just as a bombing squadron,
+returning from a daylight raid on the submarine base at Ostend, swept downward
+over the row of French poplars which lined the north end of the drome.</p>
+
+<p>“Four, five, six, seven,” Sergeant Galladay counted the returning planes as
+their wheels touched the field. “All present and accounted for. That’s good.”</p>
+
+<p>For eighteen months now he had watched the planes&mdash;not these particular
+planes, but ships varying from the old Canadian-rigged, Hispano-powered J. N.
+training planes and tricky, tail-heavy “Tommies” to these Liberty-motored
+De&nbsp;Haviland bombers; and always he got the same thrill, the same unsatisfied
+longing to fly when they took off, the same relief when they returned.</p>
+
+<p>He hadn’t flown over the enemy lines himself yet, but that wasn’t his fault.
+He had begged, pleaded, cursed, pulled wires&mdash;and all he got for it was a
+laugh and a glance at his grizzled head, a glance which said: “Too old to fly,
+old-timer&mdash;a young man’s game.” So he remained in charge of the
+noncommissioned machine gunners and the armory shop. True, by dint of threats
+and bribery he had managed to get a few joy rides and three of the pilots had
+even allowed him to handle the stick a bit. But when he requested permission
+to solo&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>Sergeant Galladay sighed as he turned back into the shack. He supposed he was
+too old&mdash;too cautious. It took the devil-may-care young-uns for air work. He
+looked very sad as he placed the Lewis gun he had been repairing back into its
+wooden case. For a moment or two he caressed the weapon absently, staring into
+space. Suddenly his shoulders went back, he pulled his fore-and-aft hat over
+the bald spot on his head and started for the door. His eyes glinted his
+determination. He’d try once more.</p>
+
+<p>The De&nbsp;Havilands were taxiing up to the camouflaged hangars which lined the
+field. Motors roared in staccato bursts. Lieutenant “Buck” Weaver, the flight
+leader, a blond, wind-tanned giant, brought his plane up to No. 1 hangar with
+a roar, cut the throttle and leaped out of the cockpit, leaving the motor
+idling. He felt a hand on his arm and turned.</p>
+
+<p>“Well, hello, Hod, old-timer!” he greeted Sergeant Galladay affectionately.</p>
+
+<p>“What luck?” demanded the sergeant.</p>
+
+<p>“Great! Six direct hits. And we picked off two Fokkers on the way home! Not
+bad, eh, Dad?”</p>
+
+<p>Sergeant Galladay scowled. He had helped to whip the tall, gawky recruit into
+a real soldier and now here he was with a commission, calling an old-timer
+“Dad”! Well, at that, the young pilot was a son of whom any real dad might be
+proud.</p>
+
+<p>“Yeah, Buck, suppose you’ll personally claim both them Boches,” Galladay said
+with heavy sarcasm. “And about five of them direct hits.” Suddenly his manner
+changed. He became mild, ingratiating, pleading. “Say, when you going to give
+me that ride over the lines you promised?”</p>
+
+<p>Lieutenant Weaver flashed a row of strong, white teeth; his young eyes smiled
+banteringly. “Any time, old-timer. How about this afternoon? We’ll get ‘Hap’
+Johnston to go along with us in his bus for company. Suit you?”</p>
+
+<p>Little chills of excitement ran up and down Sergeant Galladay’s spine; he
+could feel the hair prickle at the back of his neck. At last he was going to
+fly over the lines! With an effort he controlled himself; his face was as
+expressionless as a wooden image.</p>
+
+<p>“Suits me fine,” he agreed. “I’ll be ready. What time?”</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, about four. We’ll take a little joy ride up to Nieuport and back. You’ll
+learn what antiaircraft is like, anyway. I want to be back early. Got a date
+for six thirty.”</p>
+
+<p>“You and your dates!” scoffed Galladay, for something to say.</p>
+
+<p>Impulsively Buck Weaver took the older man’s arm and led him toward
+headquarters. Buck was overflowing with sentiment; he must tell some one, and
+it couldn’t be his flying comrades for they’d laugh at him, kid him
+unmercifully. Yes, the thrill of the successful raid had increased his
+excitement and happiness; he must tell someone his secret or burst. Why not
+the tight-lipped old marine sergeant, Dad Galladay?</p>
+
+<p>“You know any of the WAAC <i>femmes</i>, Dad?” he asked in a low voice as he strode
+along.</p>
+
+<p>Galladay nodded his grizzled head; his mind was on the promised flight and he
+hadn’t half heard the flyer’s question.</p>
+
+<p>“Then mebbe you know Miss Childers?” Buck primed, and there was a suggestion
+of holy worship in his tone. “Ruth Childers?”</p>
+
+<p>The old sergeant shook his head. He was hoping that they’d meet eight or ten
+or twelve Boche planes that afternoon. He’d show ’em some plain and fancy
+shooting.</p>
+
+<p>“Well, you got to meet her,” Buck announced gravely. “She’s the most wonderful
+girl in the world, bar none. Ask me if she’s wonderful!”</p>
+
+<p>“I’ll let ’em have it like they never got it before,” Dad Galladay muttered.</p>
+
+<p>“We’re half engaged,” the handsome young lieutenant admitted in a whisper.</p>
+
+<p>“Which half?” asked Galladay, without thinking what he said.</p>
+
+<p>“Well, it’s like this,” Buck Weaver confessed naively. “She’ll marry me if I
+give up flying. Marry me.” He repeated the words and stuttered over them.
+“Only, of course, I can’t give up flying. Not now, anyway. So we’re half
+engaged and... Holy mackerel! Here she comes to meet me! Ask me, Dad, ask me,
+isn’t she the neatest, prettiest, nicest&mdash;&mdash; Ruth, this is Sergeant Galladay.
+Dad Galladay. Miss Childers, Dad.”</p>
+
+<p>Dad Galladay received a faint impression of a mass of golden-yellow hair
+escaping from a rakish little cap, of big blue eyes, a pink-and-white
+complexion and a smiling little mouth. He realized dimly that in front of him
+stood a girl with her hand outstretched, a very attractive girl, trim and
+graceful in her neat, brown uniform. Very faintly, too, he understood that the
+girl’s blue eyes were watching Buck Weaver with love akin to worship and her
+lips were smiling at the big, blond giant with marvelous tenderness. Sergeant
+Galladay took the little hand that was proffered him.</p>
+
+<p>“I’ll betcha I’ll get eight out of them ten Boche,” Dad promised inanely.</p>
+
+<p>Too late Buck Weaver kicked the sergeant’s ankle. The girl’s blue eyes had
+widened with sudden perturbation.</p>
+
+<p>“What’d you say?” she asked, and when the old sergeant stammered incoherently,
+she turned full on Weaver. “Allington,” she pleaded with half a sob in her
+voice, “you aren’t going to fly again to-day, are you? Oh, you won’t, will
+you? Not when you don’t have to. You don’t know how I worry when you’re out.
+It makes me almost sick and&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, shoot!” scoffed Buck Weaver. “I just promised Dad a little joy ride,
+that’s all. Just up to Nieuport and back. We won’t make any contacts. Sure we
+won’t. I just want to show him how the antiaircraft work. He’s been hounding
+me to death for four months now and I got to do it.”</p>
+
+<p>“But&mdash;&mdash;” protested the girl.</p>
+
+<p>“I got to keep my promise, haven’t I?” Buck Weaver insisted. “You needn’t
+worry. Honest, we’ll scoot home at the first sign of Boche. Honest, I will,
+Ruth.”</p>
+
+<p>Ruth Childers had taken the hands of the big aviator and was staring up into
+his bronzed face.</p>
+
+<p>“All right, Buck,” she said. “This time.”</p>
+
+<p>Buck flashed a grin over his shoulder to old Dad Galladay who stood there
+awkwardly enough, shifting from one foot to the other, still thinking about
+the eight Boche planes he was going to bring down out of the ten he was
+already fighting in his imagination.</p>
+
+<p>“See you at four, Dad,” Buck announced. “<i>Toute suite.</i>”</p>
+
+<p>“Sure!” called Galladay, and as an afterthought: “Say, Miss Childers, you
+needn’t worry about Buck this afternoon. I’ll bring him home O. K. Sure I
+will.”</p>
+
+<p>The two young people strolled away arm in arm, leaving the old marine sergeant
+standing there and staring after them. But he wasn’t wondering about young
+love at all; in his mind he was already pressing the trigger of a Lewis
+machine gun, soaring high in the air and engaging ten huge enemy planes at
+once.</p>
+
+<div style='height:1em;'></div>
+
+<p>Four o’clock found the planes of Buck Weaver and Hap Johnston gassed, oiled,
+ready and on the line. Sergeant Galladay had seen to it that the motors were
+tuned up like Swiss watches. For the last hour the old war dog, dressed in a
+borrowed flying suit which was considerably too big for him, had been
+adjusting and readjusting the double Lewises in the gunner’s cockpit of plane
+No. 1. Meantime Corporal O’Hara seated in the other plane, was offering
+unheeded advice to the old-timer.</p>
+
+<p>“If we run into any Boche don’t get buck fever like I did first time,
+sergeant!” he shouted. “Yes, sir, I sat there and couldn’t fire a single shot.
+Not for the life of me. Now don’t get that way, sergeant. Just swing on ’em
+like you were shooting ducks. Throw the tracers at ’em and keep pouring ’em
+in.”</p>
+
+<p>“Say, who learned you how to shoot, kid?” Sergeant Galladay snorted
+contemptuously. “Didn’t I have to show you which end of a gun the bullets came
+from? Kid, I was shooting off’n the rear end of a mule while you was cutting
+teeth. Now you know it all just because you happened to knock down a Boche
+plane or two! Me get buck fever! Say, I expect to get eight out of ten, at
+least!”</p>
+
+<p>O’Hara grinned, “All right, old-timer! Only better men than you have had it
+and&mdash;&mdash; Here comes our two guys. Say, them two babies are the best pilots in
+the outfit, sergeant. The Heinies know it, too, and if they weren’t scared
+clean out of the air they’d be on our tails this afternoon.”</p>
+
+<p>Galladay was deaf to everything except the beating of his own heart. He
+shouted to a mechanic to “twist her tail” and the motor was running long
+before Buck Weaver reached the plane.</p>
+
+<p>“Feel a bit shaky, dad?” the pilot asked as he climbed into the cockpit. “Most
+everybody does the first trip over.”</p>
+
+<p>Sergeant Galladay shook his head. “Not a bit shaky, son,” he lied. “Say,
+listen, this airplane stuff is tame compared with the old days.”</p>
+
+<p>Pilot Weaver grinned and pushed open the throttle until the tachometer
+registered fourteen hundred revolutions, listened intently to the motor,
+wiggle-waggled his controls and nodded his satisfaction.</p>
+
+<p>“All right! Pull the blocks!”</p>
+
+<p>Two waiting mechanics removed the heavy wooden blocks in front of the wheels.
+Weaver taxied to the middle of the field, brought the plane to the wind and
+gave her the gun. The Liberty motor roared, spitting fire from the exhaust
+manifolds; slowly the big De&nbsp;Haviland crept forward, gathered speed, skimmed
+over the ground, bumped gently twice, and leaped into the air.</p>
+
+<p>Around the field the plane circled until the hangars became little camouflaged
+ant hills and the row of poplars behind them were like miniature nursery
+trees. Still climbing, Weaver swung his plane toward the coast. Sergeant
+Galladay could see the English Channel and the port of Calais with the
+shipping in the harbor like little toy boats. Then he noticed that Weaver had
+turned his head and was grinning at him. The machine gunner, exultant as a
+viking in the prow of a pirate ship, waved his hand and grinned back.</p>
+
+<p>Weaver continued to hold the plane’s nose up, and the altimeter on the
+instrument board indicated twelve thousand feet when she passed over Dunkirk.
+Beyond that point lay the skeleton houses of the ruined town of Furnes, and
+the blackened scar stretching to the eastern horizon which was the Flanders
+front.</p>
+
+<p>Sergeant Galladay peered over the side of the cockpit and scrutinized the
+ruined landscape below with awed eyes. By glory, they’d made a mess of it down
+there, he thought. A hell of a way to fight a war&mdash;men up to their necks in
+mud in those zigzagged lines of trenches. Day by day, month by month, hot as
+hell, cold as Iceland, penned up like rats in their holes, pecking at each
+other with machine guns and rifles, throwing hand grenades, waiting for a big
+shell with the right number to blow up a whole squad.</p>
+
+<p>Sergeant Galladay recalled the old, wild, free days in the
+Philippines&mdash;Haiti&mdash;Cuba. Fever, snakes, and big tropical ticks there were in
+plenty&mdash;and action, too. But it had been every man for himself there and lots
+of territory to cover&mdash;not this rat-trap warfare.</p>
+
+<p>The Germans weren’t paying any attention to the American planes at all. Where
+the devil was the Archie&mdash;the German antiaircraft?</p>
+
+<p><em>Whomp! Woof! Woof!</em></p>
+
+<p>As if in answer to his wonder the German batteries surrounding the town of
+Nieuport sent up a welcoming barrage of high explosive shells&mdash;little clouds
+of black, dirty smoke which barked at the planes like ferocious dogs. Chains
+of flaming “onions” drifted upward lazily toward the two allied planes.
+Sergeant Galladay’s heart leaped wildly. He was actually over the lines now,
+really flying above German territory. It was the realization of a dream, a
+realization which found him strangely shaken and breathless.</p>
+
+<p>Weaver turned and grinned again, then signaled to Johnston who was in their
+rear. The two planes headed back toward the allied lines.</p>
+
+<p>The antiaircraft was still banging away at them, but there didn’t seem to be a
+German plane in the sky. Oddly enough, Sergeant Galladay, for all his former
+anticipation and bloodthirsty threats, wasn’t sorry. It was a lot different
+away up there in the sky than it had been in the good old days down on terra
+firma with trees to hide behind and plenty of ammunition and a good machine
+gun set up on a tripod. Down there he was in his element; sky-high, he felt
+impotent, vulnerable, old. His mind drifted back to that day years ago when he
+had had the battle with the Moro chieftain and again to the storming of Vera
+Cruz. There a man had a chance and&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><em>Zip&mdash;zip&mdash;zip!</em></p>
+
+<p>Three white streaks cut past Sergeant Galladay’s left shoulder. He glanced
+upward, an oath of surprise on his lips. Three little planes with black
+crosses painted on their wings had appeared out of nowhere and were diving on
+the De&nbsp;Haviland, their guns gibbering death. Tracer bullets cut through the
+wing fabric. A panel strut not six inches from Lieutenant Weaver’s right ear
+flew into splinters. Sergeant Galladay stood braced in the gunner’s cockpit as
+if paralyzed, his mouth open, his eyes bulging, his guns forgotten, too
+surprised to move, even to think.</p>
+
+<p>Buck Weaver was thinking fast enough for two. He had counted on Galladay to
+keep close watch from behind and the attack had taken him completely by
+surprise, but he was young enough to react with lightning rapidity. Full motor
+he gave the De&nbsp;Haviland and banked it into a steep, climbing turn. He was
+endeavoring to shake the Fokkers off his tail and to bring his own fixed guns
+to bear, but the Germans were no novices. The leader zoomed upward and the
+other two circled right and left and dived again.</p>
+
+<p>Weaver glanced quickly around him, hoping for support. To his right Hap
+Johnston was having troubles of his own, a private little dog fight with two
+other Fokkers. There was no help there, no help anywhere, only the three enemy
+Fokkers attacking from three directions, converging their fire.</p>
+
+<p>Desperately Buck Weaver dived, twisting the plane like a snipe in flight, but
+the Germans’ fire continued to find its mark. Bullets ripped through the
+fuselage, tore at the wings, splintered the struts. One cut Weaver’s sleeve
+and a second later another struck him in the shoulder, shattering it. He cried
+out, but strove valiantly to keep control of his plane.</p>
+
+<p>Old Sergeant Galladay saw it all happen with wide, fear-haunted eyes. He
+hadn’t made a move, hadn’t fired a shot. He seemed paralyzed&mdash;a statue of a
+man. Now the De&nbsp;Haviland nosed over into a vertical dive. With a supreme
+effort Buck Weaver straightened up and momentarily righted the plunging plane.</p>
+
+<p>“Dad! For God’s sake, heads up!” he screamed.</p>
+
+<p>Sergeant Galladay couldn’t hear the words but the agonized look on Weaver’s
+face struck him like a dash of cold water, startled him back into reality as
+if from a nightmare. His mind, which had been stricken numb, suddenly began to
+race like the motor. The predicament he had created flashed in a searing flame
+across his brain. Buck fever! He, the old-timer, veteran of a dozen campaigns
+had been stricken with buck fever like the rawest recruit! But not for long.
+No, sir! Hadn’t he promised that yellow-haired girl to bring her man back safe
+and sound? Hadn’t he? And here was her man, good old Buck Weaver, in desperate
+straits.</p>
+
+<p>With the quickness of a cat the old sergeant bent low in the cockpit and swung
+his guns to bear on the nearest Fokker. Emboldened by the apparent
+defenselessness of the De&nbsp;Haviland, the German plane was diving straight upon
+its prey.</p>
+
+<p>“Damn you! Damn you!” Dad Galladay screamed. “Shoot the kid, will you? Well,
+I’ll get you for that!”</p>
+
+<p><em>Rat&mdash;tat&mdash;tat&mdash;tat!</em></p>
+
+<p>The double Lewises jabbered staccato death. Tracer
+bullets streaked upward. Sergeant Galladay saw them pour into the fuselage of
+the Fokker, saw the plane lurch into a spin, motor full on. That was all he
+needed to see in that quarter. In a flash he swung his guns to bear on the
+Fokker to the right. The German, observing the fate of his companion,
+desperately whipped his plane into an Immelman turn. Again Galladay’s double
+Lewises jabbered one short burst, but the bullets went wild and the sergeant
+swore coldly, violently, at his own marksmanship.</p>
+
+<p>Buck Weaver, weakened and dazed by loss of blood, fighting back the blackness
+of unconsciousness, sat bolt upright in the front cockpit and the De&nbsp;Haviland
+flew as if a mechanical man were at the controls&mdash;flew a level course without
+effort to maneuver, without effort to escape. It was an invitation to the two
+remaining German planes. They circled and dived again, one from each side,
+meaning to strike the death blow to this stubborn American plane and the
+American ace.</p>
+
+<p>Crouched low in the gunner’s cockpit, Sergeant Galladay waited. The Fokkers
+were already firing. A burst of bullets ripped through the De&nbsp;Haviland’s tail
+assembly; one glanced off the gun barrel not six inches from the old
+sergeant’s head, but still he withheld his fire. Buck Weaver cried out again.
+His leg was shattered this time.</p>
+
+<p>“Dad! Dad!” he shouted. “I’m going&mdash;going&mdash;&mdash;” His voice ceased, but his white
+lips slowly formed two other words: “Ruth&mdash;good-by&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
+
+<p>Dad Galladay was sighting along the barrels of the double Lewises, waiting,
+waiting. He could see the German pilot on the right peering over the side of
+the plane and it seemed to him that the man was laughing.</p>
+
+<p>“Laugh, will you?” he muttered. “All right, laugh now!” He aimed high,
+allowing for distance. It was a long shot but he had made as hard ones before
+in his life. He pressed the trigger.</p>
+
+<p><em>Rat&mdash;tat&mdash;tat&mdash;tat!</em></p>
+
+<p>The Fokker lurched sidewise, hesitated a moment; then,
+in slow, lazy circles it swung downward, the pilot hanging over the side of
+his cockpit.</p>
+
+<p>Dad Galladay shook his fist at the doomed plane. “Next!” he shouted. “Who’s
+next? Bring on your whole damned air force! We licked them, eh, Buck, my boy?”</p>
+
+<p>But Buck Weaver did not hear the shouted words. A black veil, spotted with
+crimson dots, was closing down over his eyes. He felt tired, very tired.
+Slowly he slumped down in his seat. The pilotless plane nosed over into a
+dive.</p>
+
+<p>Dad Galladay, clinging to his guns, at first thought that the sudden dive was
+a maneuver of Buck Weaver’s. Then some inner sense warned him. One glance at
+the front cockpit told him the desperate state of affairs. Weaver was “out”;
+the plane was going down out of control. Just then something stung the old
+gunner in the leg. He glanced upward. The third Fokker, fearing a ruse or
+wishing to make sure of his kill, was following the American plane down,
+pouring lead into it. The German was so sure of his prey that he was making
+not the slightest effort to protect his own plane.</p>
+
+<p>“Gotta get him!” Sergeant Galladay told himself. Once more he squinted along
+the barrels of his double weapon until the sights were on the vital section of
+the German plane. “Gotta get him!”</p>
+
+<p>He pressed the trigger, felt the beloved vibration of his machine guns. But
+the plunging plane destroyed his aim and the bullets flew wild. Cursing, he
+pressed the trigger again. The guns fired twice&mdash;<em>put-put!</em>&mdash;and were silent.
+Out of ammunition! With the swiftness of a magician, the deftness of a card
+shark, Dad Galladay whipped a pan of cartridges from the rack at his side and
+fitted it on the guns. None too soon, either. The German plane was not thirty
+yards distant. Without aiming, almost instinctively, he threw the muzzles of
+the guns at the German and pressed the trigger. Above him the Fokker wavered;
+it burst into flames; it shrieked earthward.</p>
+
+<p>The American plane was in little better circumstances. It, too, seemed utterly
+doomed. It had gone into a tailspin now, the fuselage whipping around
+viciously. A dozen more turns and the structure, weakened by German bullets,
+would fly to pieces. The earth where the flaming German lay was racing up at
+an incredible rate. Nearer, nearer&mdash;a matter of a few hundred feet now, a few
+seconds&mdash;and then eternity.</p>
+
+<p>Sergeant Galladay snatched the auxiliary control stick from its brackets in
+the gunner’s cockpit; unerringly he thrust it into the socket which connected
+with the auxiliary controls. His motions were cool, precise, his blue eyes
+were icy cold. And his mind, working with that incredible swiftness which
+sometimes precedes death, recorded impressions as the whirling tape of a
+moving-picture camera records pictures&mdash;Buck Weaver’s lifeless, bobbing head,
+the flaming skeleton of the German plane, a trench with men in pot-shaped
+helmets peering upward, a dead man on the barbed wire in front of the crowded
+trench.</p>
+
+<p>He pulled the stick back gently. A weakened flying wire snapped like a
+tightened harp string. Every strut, every member of the wounded plane screamed
+under the stress. Would she stand it? Would she fly to pieces? And then
+gracefully the De&nbsp;Haviland righted itself, barely above ground, just over the
+heads of those white-faced men in the queer, zigzag trench.</p>
+
+<p>A shout sounded, a strange mingling of exultation and savage battle cry. Dad
+Galladay, “too old to fly,” was soloing at last! Soloing over No Man’s Land,
+with a wounded pilot in the front cockpit!</p>
+
+<div style='height:1em;'></div>
+
+<p>Lieutenant Buck Weaver sat propped up in bed in the convalescent ward of a
+Belgian hospital, just behind the front lines. Around him lingered a faint
+aroma of perfume and his eyes were fixed upon the door through which Ruth
+Childers had just left.</p>
+
+<p>Suddenly the doorway framed a wheel chair in which sat Sergeant Galladay. His
+face was as red as ever and contrasted vividly with the white sheets and white
+walls of the ward; his grizzled hair rose stubbornly around his bald spot. At
+sight of Buck Weaver the cold, blue eyes of the old sergeant seemed to become
+several degrees warmer.</p>
+
+<p>He pushed his wheel chair forward rapidly with his hands until he was beside
+Buck’s bed, and for a long moment the two sat close, grinning sheepishly at
+each other.</p>
+
+<p>“Well, I reckon I better congratulate you,” Sergeant Galladay said at last. He
+threw a stubby thumb toward the door. “I met her outside.”</p>
+
+<p>“What did she tell you?” demanded Buck Weaver, his face beaming.</p>
+
+<p>“Aw&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
+
+<p>“About the congressional medal of honor you have been recommended for, eh?”</p>
+
+<p>“Medal be damned!” burred Sergeant Galladay. “She&mdash;she kissed me. I reckon
+that was for bringing you back alive, eh?”</p>
+
+<p>“And all the time you had those two bullets in you.”</p>
+
+<p>“Aw,” protested Sergeant Galladay, “I never felt ’em. I was too scared to feel
+’em.”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, you were!”</p>
+
+<p>For a moment more there was silence, broken again by Sergeant Galladay. “I
+reckon you aren’t half engaged any more,” he said, fingering the blanket which
+was wrapped around his legs. “I reckon you’re all engaged, eh?”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, Dad,” Weaver said reverentially. “She’s the finest, sweetest, prettiest,
+nicest&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
+
+<p>“Tell that to the newspapers,” interrupted Sergeant Galladay brusquely. “I
+heard it all once before, anyway.” He pointed an accusing finger at the young
+flyer. “Say! I bet you promised her to give up flyin’&mdash;get transferred to the
+damn infantry or somethin’! Didn’t yuh?”</p>
+
+<p>Buck Weaver nodded, but the spasm of mingled disgust and indignation which
+twisted the old-timer’s face caused him to burst out laughing.</p>
+
+<p>“It isn’t so bad as all that, Dad,” he chuckled. “We compromised. I promised
+never to climb into a ship again&mdash;after the war.”</p>
+
+<p>The expression of righteous indignation on Dad Galladay’s face faded to a
+sheepish grin. Suddenly his eyes hardened, blue metal between two slits. In
+his imagination his wheel chair became the gunner’s cockpit of a battle plane,
+the crutch across his lap a machine gun. Buck Weaver was in the pilot’s
+cockpit; twenty Boche fighting planes were swooping down upon them. Dad
+Galladay waved the crutch wildly.</p>
+
+<p>“Bang! Bang! Bang!” he shouted gleefully. “Take that, and that, and that!”</p>
+
+<p>A water bottle on the bed table was knocked to the floor. Its thud brought
+Sergeant Galladay back to earth, and the wheel chair became a wheel chair, the
+crutch merely a crutch. Dad Galladay leaned over and touched Buck Weaver on
+the arm.</p>
+
+<p>“Say, Buck, old-timer,” he confided in an awed voice, “we’ll sure give ’em
+hell when we’re out of here and flying together, eh?” His voice dropped.
+“Gosh, it ain’t hardly fair, Buck. No, sir, it ain’t right. We’re jest too
+damn good for them Heinies.”</p>
+
+<div class='tn mb10'>
+<div class='tac'>Transcriber’s Notes</div>
+<ol>
+<li>This story appeared in <i>The Popular Magazine</i>, November 7, 1929.</li>
+<li>Author consistenly used "De Haviland" to describe "De Havilland".</li>
+<li>"Paris Island" is the original name of what is now "Parris Island"</li>
+</ol>
+</div>
+
+<div style='text-align:center'>*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 76617 ***</div>
+</body>
+</html>
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for eBook #76617
+(https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/76617)