Blood Red City

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Authors: Justin Richards

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For Julian & Chris

 

2/26/42

REF: POTUS A-DIST 422602-1/H

CONFIDENTIAL – FOR DISTRIBUTION LIST ‘A' PERSONNEL ONLY

RE: Los Angeles Incident 24 February 1942

 

The President has asked me to inform you that while we still have no tangible evidence of an airborne incursion it seems likely that the incident the press have called “The Battle of Los Angeles” was triggered by an unidentified aircraft.

The airplane was probably Japanese and may be connected to the submarine that shelled the Ellwood fuel facility, north of Santa Barbara, on 23 Feb. Reports that the plane maneuvered and departed at extremely high speed and was of an unusual design cannot yet be discounted. Following that initial alert, RADAR later detected a trace 120 miles west of LA at 02:15 on night of 24/25 and tracked it in to the coast, where it was lost as it headed inland.

The positive news is that our emergency plan was operated as soon as the potential hostile was reported. A total blackout was enforced throughout the city and the 37th Coast Artillery Brigade responded with machine guns and anti-aircraft fire. In excess of 1400 shells were fired.

The all-clear was sounded at 07:21 on morning of 25 Feb.

We now know as well as minor material damage to buildings and vehicles, there were 5 fatalities as an indirect result of the incident. 2 were heart attacks, the other 3 due to traffic accidents.

Although local press sources are already announcing a cover-up, our official position, as articulated by the Secretary of the Navy yesterday, remains that the incident was a false alarm due to anxiety and war nerves. The differing opinion of Secretary Stimson and the Army is noted.

No further action.

 

CHAPTER 1

Officially, it was not a battle at all. But to Jed Haines, watching from the safety of his apartment, it certainly looked like one. He'd been up late, planning to finish notes for an article on the shelling of Ellwood. But now it looked like that would take second place as evidence of the USA's lack of readiness for war on its own mainland.

Another shell exploded high above the city, the smoke caught like clouds in the misty glare of the searchlights. The windows of the apartment rattled alarmingly. He had lost count of the number of percussions and flashes. He'd given up taking photographs – everyone in the city must be awake, and every other newspaperman in Los Angeles who possessed a camera must be taking photos. There would be nothing special about his own snapshots.

Unless, Jed thought, he managed to get a photo that no one else could. He had a good view from the apartment – at the top of one of the higher blocks in the area and on raised ground. Maybe from the roof he'd even see one of the attacking planes.

The night was cold and bitter. Smoke drifted across the roof of the apartment block, making the air taste acrid. Searchlights intersected above Jed as he negotiated a low brick wall and made his way along a lead-lined gulley to find the best vantage point.

He couldn't hear the planes, just the crump of exploding anti-aircraft shells and the distant chatter of heavy machine guns. Now he thought about it, although the sky was aglow with light and fire, he hadn't seen a single airplane. Was it just some sort of false alarm brought on by panic? Or a drill for the air defences?

Jed only had the camera for the occasional portrait shot to accompany one of his pieces for the paper. Anything important and they sent out a photographer along with Jed. He discarded the flash – it wouldn't help tonight.

He scoured the searchlight beams for a sign of anything other than smoke, taking a couple of shots that would probably be completely black. He should have grabbed a coat, but there was no point in staying here long. Give it five minutes and he'd head back inside and make coffee.

When the five minutes was up, or near enough, Jed took another photo. He might have been lucky enough to catch an explosion right overhead. Or he might not. He was too cold to care any more. He was turning to go when he saw it.

Just at the edge of a searchlight beam, off to the east. A dark shape moved smoothly through the night. It looked as if it was
part
of the night. Darkness given shape. Jed tried to focus on it, but the shadowy form seemed to slip from his vision just as it slipped from the beams of light. It wasn't an airplane – there were no wings, just a stunted, oval fuselage. Its shape was defined only by what it obscured.

Instinctively he raised the camera. From here, high up and off to the side, he actually had a perfect shot. He clicked the shutter, wound the film on, clicked again. And again.

Through the tiny viewfinder he saw the dark shape moving away, gathering speed. He lowered the camera, and watched as it accelerated suddenly into the distance – inland towards the desert.

The air continue to crackle and explode around him, but Jed barely noticed. He clutched the camera like it was his most valuable possession – which it quite possibly was.

*   *   *

The battle, if it was a battle, continued for several more hours. Jed changed the film in the camera and snapped a few more pictures from the relative warmth of his apartment. Light and confusion, sound and fury.

When he arrived at the office next morning, calm restored, the talk was of nothing else. But Felix, Jed's editor, was less than enthusiastic. He had already got the official story that the night's fireworks had been nothing more than panic and nerves.

‘I called a friend who worked in London last year,' he told Jed wearily. ‘He said, if you have to ask if it's an air raid, then it ain't an air raid.'

‘It wasn't just panic,' Jed countered. ‘They were shooting
at
something.'

‘Shadows and ghosts. That's what the military say, that's what the government say. I know because some guy from Washington called to tell me first thing so this morning. No bombs fell, right?'

‘If you say so.'

‘I say so. No bombs, no raid. No planes even. End of story.'

‘There was a plane,' Jed said. ‘A weird one. I got pictures.' He brandished the camera as if that proved it.

Felix frowned. ‘You sure?'

‘Won't know for certain till the film's developed. But I think so.'

Felix gestured for him to hand over the camera. ‘The army want any pictures we have. They don't want people thinking the Japs can bomb mainland USA when it was all just a false alarm.'

Reluctantly, Jed handed Felix the camera. ‘If it was a false alarm, why do they want the pictures?'

‘Hey, don't get smart with me. Because they're the military. You may not like it, and I certainly don't like it. But there's a war on, so what they say goes if we want to keep publishing.'

‘You think they could close us down?'

‘They could stop giving us war news.'

‘So much for a free press,' Jed muttered.

‘You've got a lot to learn,' Felix told him. ‘Now get out of here and do something useful. Mike's running the story about the false alarm. Help him with that, and if there's anything good on this –' he waved Jed's camera – ‘I'll let you know.'

If there was, Jed reckoned the military would keep it to themselves. But he knew there was nothing of interest on the film in the camera. The plane or whatever it was that he'd photographed was on the film he still had in his pocket. He sure as hell wasn't giving that up.

‘Mike says you saw something,' Cynthia called out to Jed as he passed.

‘We all saw something.' He forced a smile.

She took off her glasses, letting them dangle on their chain across her impressive bosom, and leaned forwards across her desk. ‘I mean
really
saw something. That what you told him? What did Felix say?'

‘He doesn't want to know.' Jed perched on the other side of her desk. ‘But yeah, I saw a plane or something all right. Don't believe me?' he added, seeing her smile.

She looked round before she answered, her voice low and conspiratorial. ‘Had a few people phone in and say they saw something moving northeast over the city. Must have passed right over your place.'

‘Nerves and panic,' Jed said warily. ‘Mass hysteria.'

‘That'd be it.' She leaned back, rolling a pencil between her forefinger and thumb.

‘So what else are people saying?' Jed asked.

‘It'll cost you dinner.' She tapped the end of the pencil against her lips.

‘OK. Dinner.'

‘Got one guy says he reckons this mass hysteria came down somewhere out past Pasadena.'

‘You told Felix about this?'

She put down the pencil and retrieved her glasses. ‘Like you said, he's not interested. But I thought you might be.'

‘Yeah,' Jed murmured. He had his hand in his jacket pocket, holding the roll of film from last night. ‘Yeah, I'm interested.'

*   *   *

The cellar was lit only by candles. The flickering light did little to dispel the shadows. Darkness clung to the edges of the chamber like a shroud, spilling out of arched alcoves across the flagstoned floor. The stone table in the centre of the vaulted space was like an altar. The figures' faces were concealed by shadow within the hoods of their cloaks as they processed round the table, their chanting voices echoing off the brickwork.

The young woman lying on the table stared up at the ceiling, watching the smoke drift and shimmer in the flickering light. The stone was cold through the red velvet sheet draped over it and the thin white cotton dress that was all she wore. It reached down to her knees, her bare legs and feet stretching out towards the corners of the table.

As the chanting reached its peak, she blinked, and slowly sat up. Her dark hair was cut short, reaching to the nape of her neck at the back and fringed like a schoolboy's over her green eyes as she stared into the distance. Her pale face was expressionless.

The chanting died away. The cloaked figures bowed and stepped back, moving to the edges of the room.

The leading figure pushed back his hood to reveal the bald scalp and craggy features beneath. ‘It is done,' he said with grim anticipation. ‘Now we can only watch and learn.'

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