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Authors: Robert J. Mrazek

BOOK: Valhalla
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TWO

9 November
Helheim Glacier
Greenland Ice Cap

It was a calculated risk to attempt the recovery in November, but Hancock had spent his life taking risks, from the air battles he had fought as a fighter pilot in Desert Storm to the founding of Anschutz International with fifty thousand dollars he had won in a Kilgore, Texas, poker game.

They were down to six hours of sunlight each day. By November 22, it would be only three hours. By December 1, the cap would be cloaked in total darkness, and the sun would not appear again for forty-five days.

Hancock wasn't about to wait six months to recover the plane. His men and equipment were ready to go. Worst case, they would have to abandon the recovery effort and return in the spring. He told Steve Macaulay, his second-in-command, to do whatever it took, regardless of the cost.

A day later, Base Hancock One took shape on the ice.

Two de Havilland DHC-6 Twin Otters had been modified to carry freight, and they began flying in supplies and equipment the following day, including two thermal meltdown generators, pumps, drilling equipment, diesel generators, spare parts, a satellite communications system, a fully equipped camp kitchen, two bulldozers, and storage containers crammed with meat, vegetables, and other food supplies.

The men quickly constructed a small complex of insulated arctic tents in a rough circle around the proposed drilling site. A helicopter pad was laid out with landing lights. A thousand-gallon tank of diesel fuel was flown in from Kulusuk, and fuel lines were run to all the tents and the modular washroom/latrine.

The effort to recover
March Hare
began the second day. A steel platform rig was set down over the site of the drilling shaft, followed by a thermal meltdown generator. Nicknamed the BADGER, it was twelve feet in diameter, and would melt a circular shaft until they reached the plane. At a melting rate of two feet per hour, the team members extrapolated they would reach
March Hare
in about three days.

Heavy snow and driving winds from the Arctic Circle hit them hard as soon as they were under way. The tents were nearly buried in the first blizzard, but the snow provided good insulation, and the expedition's bulldozers kept the pathways open between the complex and the helicopter pad.

The temperature fell to well below zero degrees Fahrenheit and stayed there. Off duty, the men wriggled into their arctic mummy bags to keep warm. Four days after
they commenced drilling, the BADGER reached the targeted depth of one hundred forty feet.

Hancock and Macaulay made plans to enter
March Hare
through the underbelly hatch in the forward compartment. Knowing that human remains might still be on the plane, Macaulay had arranged to have an honor guard flown up from the Mortuary Affairs Center at Dover Air Force Base to accompany the bodies home.

The BADGER was removed from the shaft and replaced with a steel elevator cage operated by a power hoist. Two men equipped with high-pressure steam hoses were lowered down the shaft. At the bottom, they began burrowing toward the forward hatch, melting a tunnel as they went.

As soon as they reached the Fortress, the men were brought back to the surface, where Hancock and Macaulay, both wearing waterproof thermal suits and insulated rubber boots, were waiting to go down.

Macaulay planned to operate a lightweight, high-definition color zoom camera designed for use in confined spaces. Hancock carried a portable floodlight. Two transceivers with voice-activated microphones were incorporated into their headgear.

“Hey . . . take a look at this,” shouted one of the engineers at the entrance to the platform rig.

Outside, the snow had stopped and the dark sky was filled with pulsating ripples of violet, red, and brilliant green.

“The goddess Aurora is trying to tell us something,” Macaulay said with a laugh.

In Desert Storm, Macaulay had been Hancock's air squadron commander. Now their roles were reversed. In
some ways, they couldn't have been more different. Quick to laugh, Macaulay was tall and slender with an easygoing personality. Hancock was short, stocky, and intense.

“Let's get going,” said Hancock.

When they reached the bottom of the shaft, he led the way into the tunnel to
March Hare
. A steady drip of melting ice wept from the frozen concave roof above them. When they reached the polished steel hatch beneath the forward compartment, Hancock reached up to turn its handle.

“Okay . . . we're going in,” Hancock radioed to the surface.

THREE

13 November
Helheim Glacier
Greenland Ice Cap

Hancock's breath condensed like cigarette smoke in the frigid air as he directed the floodlights toward the bombardier's station in the nose of the plane. Macaulay followed the lights with his camera. The compartment was empty. The bombardier's leather data case rested against one of the anchored legs of his chair. A Red Sox baseball cap hung from the bombsight harness.

“No bombsight,” said Hancock.

“The Norden was top secret back then,” said Macaulay. “The bombardier wouldn't have been assigned one until they got to England.”

The plane's navigator had also worked in the forward compartment, and his metal desk was covered by a topographical map of Greenland. He had penciled in the plane's route all the way from Goose Bay. The line ended over Greenland.

There was no corrosion anywhere, no decay of any kind. The machine guns lying on the deck were oiled and ready to fire, along with the bright copper casings of ammunition.

They climbed up to the cockpit, where the pilot and copilot had commanded the plane. It was empty too. Maybe they had all gotten out, Macaulay thought. But where could they have gone?

Macaulay eased himself into the pilot's seat. An open pack of Lucky Strike cigarettes rested on the edge of the console by the throttle controls. The instrument gauges looked like they were waiting to be turned on. It struck him that the restoration team back in Lubbock wouldn't have much work to do on this plane.

He and Hancock headed aft past the top-turret machine gun to the bomb bay compartment. Aside from the scrape of their ice cleats on the steel deck, it was as silent as a tomb.

The bomb bay was crammed with unmarked wooden crates still strapped into position with thick cordage. Inside were President Roosevelt's Christmas presents to the European elite. Hancock pointed to another stack at the rear of the compartment. Each crate was labeled
Old Forester Kentucky Straight Bourbon Whisky
. One of them had been cracked open.

The radio compartment was next and it was as empty as the others. The aircraft's BC-348 radio receiver was mounted to the tabletop. A
Dick Tracy
comic book sat on top of it. The BC-375 transmitter on the opposite bulkhead was turned to the
ON
position.

In the waist gunners' compartment, they found the answer to the riddle.

The crew hadn't gotten out after all. Nine of them lay sprawled out in the compartment, which had clearly been organized as a last redoubt against the agonizing cold.

The men had sealed the hatches of the waist guns and gathered all their clothing and blankets together to stay warm. Most were wearing their sheepskin-lined flying suits with lined bunny boots. They had all frozen to death.

Hancock directed the lights at their faces one by one, and Macaulay recorded them on his video camera. Their faces reflected a mixture of sadness, resignation, perplexity, and despair.

“Not the worst way to go, Steve.”

“Buried alive wouldn't be my choice.”

Dick Slezak, the turret gunner, looked impossibly young for a man who would now be approaching ninety if he had survived the war. He would always be eighteen.

“Ted Morgan is missing,” said Macaulay after they examined the nine bodies.

Morgan was the pilot who had made the miraculous landing in the middle of the blizzard. He had been twenty-three years old and hailed from Macaulay's hometown of Lexington, Virginia.

Shortly after Pearl Harbor, Morgan had married an army nurse named Cherie Carter. A year later, she had given birth to a baby girl. Cherie was still alive, now a ninety-year-old grandmother. She had remarried seven years after Ted had disappeared.

They found him in the tail gunner's compartment. He was lying on his back and staring up toward the surface of the ice cap as if visually attempting to escape from their tomb.

Macaulay remembered his face from Morgan's personnel file. It had reminded Macaulay of himself, lean and square-jawed, with a hint of cockiness. A hot flier who had wanted to be a fighter pilot and had instead been assigned to bombers.

The cockiness was gone now.

The opened bottle of Old Forester stood next to him on the floor of the compartment. Three inches remained in the bottom. Near his outstretched hand was a leather-bound diary. Macaulay unzipped it and thumbed through the last few pages. Morgan had survived almost two weeks. He had been the last to die.

28 December '42. Did a good job landing the plane in snow and darkness. Everyone safe. Radio not working, but Jeff hopes to fix it soon and send out our approximate position. Can't be more than ten miles from the coast.

5 January '43. Snow hasn't stopped since we landed. Slezak dug his way up from the waist door and broke through the snow layer about eight feet above the top turret. Men now take turns going up with a flare gun. If one hears an airplane, he is to shoot off a flare. Brutal up there. No one can stay outside more than thirty minutes.

8 January '43. Jacobs fired all our flares off when he said he heard aircraft.

Morgan's handwriting began to deteriorate.

9 January '43. Can no longer get to the surface. Slezak tried to break through but gave up at twenty-five feet. We are trapped. . . . Emergency food gone. No gas left in tanks. Flashlights dead. Total darkness.

The heat from the floodlight Hancock was holding began to melt the patina of ice on Morgan's face. Some of it pooled in the corners of his eyes, and he looked as if he were crying.

11 January '43. Last one left. If anyone ever finds us, please contact Cherie and tell her I loved her to the end. Forgive me.

Macaulay handed the diary to Hancock.

“Poor bastard,” he said after reading the last entries.

Morgan had shot himself in the heart with his army-issue.45.

Macaulay lifted up the opened bottle of Old Forester, took a long swig, and passed it to Hancock.

“Like you said up top, J.L. . . . to the crew of
March Hare
.”

They finished the bottle.

FOUR

14 November
Helheim Glacier
Greenland Ice Cap

After
March Hare
's crew members were brought to the surface, their bodies were temporarily interred in an ice cairn, and the expedition team gathered for a brief memorial service.

Macaulay couldn't help wondering how Ted Morgan's wife would react after gazing down again at his twenty-three-year-old face. He had already relayed the names to the Mortuary Affairs Center at Dover Air Force Base. They would be sending an honor guard to escort them home.

“I need Melissa,” Hancock said to Macaulay when it was over.

“Sure, J.L.,” he replied with a grin.

An hour later, a slim, busty young woman wearing a jaunty ski cap, gold-trimmed sunglasses, and a form-fitting ski suit arrived on the Bell helicopter from the
airfield at Kulusuk. Macaulay met her at the edge of the landing zone. She was fuming.

“I've been living for a week in a tar paper shack back at what they call an airport in this godforsaken country,” she pouted.

A Dallas Cowboys cheerleader, she was one of John Lee's flavors of the month. As he had for the others, he had bought her a new Porsche 911 Carrera. The dealership in Fort Worth now gave him a fleet rate. He let each girl pick her own color. Melissa's was neon pink.

“From those to whom much is given, much is expected,” Macaulay said to her with a straight face.

“What's that's supposed to mean?” she demanded.

“The parable of the faithful servant, Melissa,” he said. “Luke 12:48.”

She looked at him as if he had lost his mind.

“Where is he?” she demanded.

Macaulay pointed to Hancock's sleeping tent, and she headed over to it, carrying a small leather briefcase. A few moments after she entered the tent, Hap Arnold, Hancock's white Alsatian, came lumbering out.

An hour later, Melissa reemerged, got back aboard the helicopter, and flew off. When she was gone, Hap stuck his head back inside Hancock's tent to see if he was welcome, and joined his master inside.

Over the next two days, men using steam hoses melted a massive cavern above and around the fortress. One of the team's mechanics concluded that if
March Hare
had been on the surface, they would have only had to replace the batteries and add fuel to the tanks to fly it off the cap. Instead, the bomber would have to be brought up in sections.

Macaulay was in the operations tent, going over the logistical plan to fly out the components, when Noah Hastings, one of the helicopter pilots, came inside with a puzzled look on his face.

“Steve, I happened to turn on the QUESTON (V) in the bird this morning and it's really weird. . . . We have another strong metallic signal below
March Hare
.”

“How far below it?” asked Macaulay.

“I'm not sure. George is doing an equipment recalibration of the radar equipment to make sure I wasn't seeing things. He ought to have pictures soon.”

George Cabot was a former air force intelligence officer and the team's technical expert. He arrived a few minutes later with the virtual scans, his carrot red hair standing straight up. Hancock joined them.

“This is definitely interesting,” he said.

“Could it be an ore deposit?” asked Hancock.

“Too small,” said Cabot. “And there's a pattern to it.”

He laid the scans on the table.

“Look here. You see these dots? They're almost exactly a foot apart from one another and run in almost straight lines. . . . These four intersect.”

“So what could that mean?” asked Hancock.

“If I had to make a wild guess, I'd say it looks like four long rows of iron rivets,” said Cabot.

“A ship?” asked Macaulay.

“Possibly . . . Whatever it is, the thing is nearly a hundred feet long and fifteen feet wide at the center. The rivets look like they taper at each end. These ones down the center line could be a keel, these others the ribs and thwarts.”

Macaulay stared down at the images.

“Incidentally,” added Cabot, “there's another metallic pulse coming from the bedrock underneath that thing. . . . No idea what it could be.”

“What would a ship be doing this far from the coast?” asked Macaulay.

“Who knows? They've recorded two-hundred-foot seas in the North Atlantic . . . or maybe it was portaged there. All I know is that it's sitting on original bedrock, so it's been down there a long time.”

“How far?” asked Hancock.

Cabot looked at the second scan.

“More than five hundred feet,” he said.

“That's three times the depth of
March Hare
,” said Macaulay.

“Yeah, too far,” agreed Cabot.

Hancock was still gazing at the possible rivet lines.

“Well, we're already down a hundred forty,” he said, “and it will take us at least four more days to bring up
March Hare
and get it shipped out of here. The BADGER is definitely too slow. Let's put the WEASEL to work.”

“You're going after it?” asked Cabot, scratching his red hair.

“We're here anyway. . . . Hell, it could be fun,” said Hancock.

The WEASEL was the smaller of the two thermal meltdown units designed and built by his engineers. Only three feet in diameter, it could melt ice at five feet per hour, almost triple the rate of the BADGER. Another three hundred sixty feet would only take about three days.

An hour later, it was operational.

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