Collins, Max Allan - Nathan Heller 10

Collins, Max Allan - Nathan Heller 10 Read Free

Book: Collins, Max Allan - Nathan Heller 10 Read Free
Author: Flying Blind (v5.0)
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our boys started advancing. So you figured you could reclaim a bird or two?”
    He nodded. With his sunglasses off, he had sky-blue eyes with long, almost feminine lashes, curiously beautiful in a craggy male face. “I had a couple museums on the hook, eager to buy planes to restore and display. But it never panned out.”
    “Never found any?”
    “Oh, hell, there was a passel of ’em, all right. Zeros, mostly. Only in shit-poor condition. Planes either past restoration or too difficult to pry loose from the underbrush and overgrowth. Did some diving, too, ’cause we knew some planes went down; but what with rust and corrosion…. It was a fool’s errand, and you’re lookin’ at the head fool.”
    I studied him. “Did you think you were going to find Amelia’s Lockheed?”
    “Not hardly.” Now the blue eyes had a twinkle. “You see, I know what happened to that ‘flyin’ laboratory’ of hers. I saw it.”
    That perked me up. “When in hell?”
    “The first time I was in Saipan…July 1944.”
    “You saw the plane.”
    “We’d just captured Aslito Field. You or your wife mind if I smoke?”
    “Go ahead.”
    He dug out a pack of Lucky Strikes and fired one up, waving out the match as he said, “I was one of several Marine guards posted outside this padlocked hangar. Some of the brass were arguing with this fella in a white shirt, no sidearm, and you know sidearms were mandatory for officers in combat zones. Some kinda intelligence spook, I gathered…. Seems Major Greene discovered this American plane in Jap storage, and wanted to make sure the Marines got credit for it. But this guy in the white shirt was backing ’em off—and they were taking it.”
    “Did you see this plane?”
    “Yes and no. A buddy of mine said they rolled her out and actually flew her. I didn’t see that. That night, off duty—we were bivouacked a half-mile away—we heard an explosion, over at the airfield. Bunch of us went over there and this plane, a Lockheed Electra, civilian plane, was the hell on fire. Like somebody’d poured gas on and lit her up like a bonfire. Still, I could make out an ID number—NR16020—which meant nothin’ to me at the time.”
    That was the registration number of Amelia’s Lockheed Electra, the one she’d taken on her final, ill-fated flight around the world. She and her navigator, Fred Noonan, had taken off on the last leg of the landmark flight, from Lae, New Guinea, on July 2, 1937. Their destination was tiny Howland Island, 2,556 miles away. It was the most famous unfinished trip in history.
    “Jap sabotage?” I asked, referring to the burning plane. “There would’ve been plenty of our little yellow friends left on the island, in the hills and trees and caves.”
    “I don’t think so,” he said, shaking his head, no. “I think somebody was destroyin’ evidence. That fella I saw? In the white shirt? He had a real familiar face. I recognized him from the papers, or anyway I knew I should have recognized him from the papers. He was somebody.”
    “Did it ever come to you, who he was?”
    He snorted a laugh. “Only the goddamn Secretary of the Navy. Remember that guy? James Vincent Forrestal!”
    Names from the past can have a funny effect on you. Sometimes a warm feeling flows through you; my stomach had just gone cold. Colder than my wife’s coffee could ever cure.
    The blue eyes tightened. “You all right, Nate?”
    We’d gone to first names, a long time ago. Sometimes I’m not all that easy to read; but I guess the blood had drained out of my poker face.
    “Yeah. Sure. Get back to your story, Buddy. Trying to reclaim those old warbirds.”
    He grinned again; dentures, I’d decided. “I guess I am gettin’ ahead of myself, jumpin’ around…. Anyway, while we were on Majuro, misguidedly mountin’ a machete expedition into the jungle to try and liberate one of the better-preserved Zeros, this fella…he was in charge of this heavy equipment yard where we were

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