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The Bombing
By 5:50 it was real light outside. Our genial Bombardier, Lieutenant
Levy, comes over to invite me to take his front row seat in
the transparent nose of the ship and I accept eagerly. From
that vantage point in space, 17,000 feet above the Pacific,
one gets a view of hundreds of miles on all sides, horizontally
and vertically. At that height the vast ocean below and the
sky above seem to merge into one great sphere. I was on the
inside of that firmament, riding above the giant mountains of
white cumulous clouds, letting myself be suspended in infinite
space. One hears the whirl of the motors behind one, but soon
becomes insignificant against the immensity all around and is
before long swallowed by it. There comes a point where space
also swallows time, and one lives through eternal moments filled
with an oppressive loneliness, as though all life had suddenly
vanished from the earth and you are only one left, a lone survivor
traveling endlessly through interplanetary space. My mind soon
returns to the mission I am on. Somewhere beyond these vast
mountains of white clouds ahead of me there lies Japan, the
land of our enemy. In about four hours from now one of its cities,
making weapons of war for use against us will be wiped off the
map by the greatest weapon ever made by man. In one-tenth of
a millionth of a second, a fraction of time immeasurable by
any clock, a whirlwind from the skies will pulverize thousands
of its buildings and tens of thousands of its inhabitants. Our
weather planes ahead of us are on their way to find out where
the wind blows. Half an hour before target time we will know
what the winds have decided. Does one feel any pity or compassion
for the poor devils about to die? Not when one thinks of Pearl
Harbor and of the death march on Bataan. We reached Yakoshima
at 9:12 and there, about 4,000 feet ahead of us, was "The
Great Artiste" with its precious load. I saw Lieutenant
Godfrey and Sergeant Curry strap on their parachutes and I decided
to do likewise. We started circling. We saw little towns on
the coastline, heedless of our presence. We kept on circling,
waiting for the third ship in our formation. It was 9:23 when
we began heading for the coastline. Our weather scouts had sent
us code messages, deciphered by Sergeant Curry, informing us
that both the primary target as well as the secondary were clearly
visible. The winds of destiny seemed to favor certain Japanese
cities that must remain nameless. We circled about them again
and again and found no opening in the thick umbrella of clouds
that covered them. Destiny chose Nagasaki as the ultimate target.
We had been circling for some time when we noticed black puffs
of smoke coming through the white clouds directly at us. There
were 15 bursts of flak in rapid succession, all too low. Captain
Bock changed his course. There soon followed eight more bursts
of flak, right up to our altitude, but by this time we were
too far to the left. We flew southward down the channel and
at 11:33 crossed the coastline and headed straight for Nagasaki
about a hundred miles to the west. Here again we circled until
we found an opening in the clouds. It was 12:01 and the goal
of our mission had arrived. We heard the pre-arranged signal
on our radio, put on our ARC welder's glasses and watched tensely
the maneuverings of the strike ship about half a mile in front
of us. "There she goes!" someone said. Out of the
belly of the Artiste what looked like a black object came downward.
Captain Bock swung around to get out of range, but even though
we were turning away in the opposite direction, and despite
the fact that it was broad daylight in our cabin, all of us
became aware of a giant flash that broke through the dark barrier
of our ARC welder's lenses and flooded our cabin with an intense
light. We removed our glasses after the first flash but the
light still lingered on, a bluish-green light that illuminated
the entire sky all around. A tremendous blast wave struck our
ship and made it tremble from nose to tail. This was followed
by four more blasts in rapid succession, each resounding like
the boom of cannon fire hitting our plane from all directions.
Observers in the tail of our ship saw a giant ball of fire rise
as though from the bowels of the earth, belching forth enormous
white smoke rings. Next they saw a giant pillar of purple fire,
10,000 feet high, shooting skyward with enormous speed. By the
time our ship had made another turn in the direction of the
atomic explosion the pillar of purple fire had reached the level
of our altitude. Only about 45 seconds had passed. Awe-struck,
we watched it shoot upward like a meteor coming from the earth
instead of from outer space, becoming ever more alive as it
climbed skyward through the white clouds. It was no longer smoke,
or dust, or even a cloud of fire. It was a living thing, a new
species of being, born right before our incredulous eyes. At
one stage of its evolution, covering missions of years in terms
of seconds, the entity assumed the form of a giant square totem
pole, with its base about three miles long, tapering off to
about a mile at the top. Its bottom was brown, its center was
amber, its top white. But it was a living totem pole, carved
with many grotesque masks grimacing at the earth. Then, just
when it appeared as though the thing has settled down into a
state of permanence, there came shooting out of the top a giant
mushroom that increased the height of the pillar to a total
of 45,000 feet. The mushroom top was even more alive than the
pillar, seething and boiling in a white fury of creamy foam,
sizzling upwards and then descending earthward, a thousand old
faithful geysers rolled into one. It kept struggling in an elemental
fury, like a creature in the act of breaking the bonds that
held it down. In a few seconds it had freed itself from its
gigantic stem and floated upward with tremendous speed, its
momentum carrying into the stratosphere to a height of about
60,000 feet. But no sooner did this happen when another mushroom,
smaller in size than the first one, began emerging out of the
pillar. It was as though the decapitated monster was growing
a new head. As the first mushroom floated off into the blue
it changed its shape into a flower-like form, its giant petal
curving downward, creamy white outside, rose-colored inside.
It still retained that shape when we last gazed at it from a
distance of about 200 miles. U.S. War Department PR Release,
by William L. Laurence, science writer for the New York Times,
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