[ [A]

For definitions of military and aeronautical terms, as well as certain slang peculiar to army life, see glossary at the back of the book.


41CHAPTER II
A Pass to Paris

1

The following morning dawned with the quiet splendor and benediction which April mornings bring to the rural province of Cote d’Or. By the time the sun had climbed above the low hills to the east and was turning the dew covered fields into limitless acres of flashing diamonds and sapphires, McGee and Larkin had hurried through breakfast and were on their way out to the hangars where the mechanics, following Larkin’s orders, would have the two Camels waiting on the line. As the car rolled along the smooth highway leading to the flying field, McGee sank back in the none too comfortable cushions and drank deep of the tonic of early morning.

“Some day!” he said. Larkin merely nodded–the only reply needed when Spring is in the air.

“It would be more fun to drive up to Paris,” McGee offered.

Larkin looked at him in surprise. “Where’d you get that idea?”

“Well, nearly all of my impressions of France are 42from the air. It stands for so many squares of green fields, of little rivers gleaming like silver ribbons interlaced through squares of green and brown plush, of torn up battlefronts where there is no life, no color–nothing but desolation. But this seems like another world. Here are spring flowers, the orchards are in bloom, and children are playing in the narrow streets of the towns. Flying over it, you look down on all that. You see it–and you don’t see it. But in driving we would feel that we were a part of it. There’s a difference. It gives you a feeling that you are better acquainted with the people, and you get a chance to smell something besides the beastly old Clerget motors in those Camels. I’m getting so I feel sick every time I smell burning oil. Let’s drive up, Buzz.”