The Black Veil July 15, 1947 B-29 Superfortress near Berlin
The B-29 Superfortress took to the skies just after midnight, a weary beast droning over the darkened outskirts of Berlin. The six-man crew was bone-tired but still sharp enough to know this flight was supposed to be routine — reconnaissance and nothing more. Yet, something was off.
The cockpit lights cast long shadows as Captain Reynolds gripped the controls, squinting through the frost that slowly crept across the windows.
Lieutenant Harper sat nearby, fiddling with the radio, frustration clear in his movements.
"All I’m getting is static... and maybe the ghost of a bad broadcast,"he said dryly.
"You got a ghost problem, Captain?"
Reynolds shot him a look.
"Don’t invite trouble, Harper. This plane’s already creaking like it’s on its last legs."
Sergeant Mills snorted, tapping the compass.
"This compass is spazzing out worse than a rookie on his first flight. Spinning like it’s got worms," he grumbled.
"Worms? You been eating those rations again?" Daniels, the youngest crewmember, cracked a nervous smile.
Mills scowled.
"Kid, if those rations were poison, I wouldn’t still be here."
The frost thickened, veins of ice spiderwebbing across the glass, creeping closer as the heaters struggled against the cold.
"Anyone else feeling like we’re headed straight to the North Pole?"Daniels asked, rubbing his arms.
"Shut it, Daniels. Cold’s better than whatever’s coming," Harper snapped, his eyes fixed on the flickering radio.
Suddenly, the radio hissed and spat static — then faint whispers, low murmurs that sent a chill deeper than the frost ever could.
"Did you hear that?" Daniels whispered.
"Yeah," Mills muttered, "sounds like my mother-in-law complaining about the war."
Reynolds gave a dry chuckle.
"Alright, funny guy. Focus up, we’re almost over the target zone."
The plane shuddered suddenly. Instruments flickered and dimmed.
"Now the compass thinks it’s a roulette wheel," Harper said, fiddling desperately with switches.
Engines sputtered.
"Number three’s coughing up a lung," he reported.
The plane lurched violently.
"Hold her steady!" Reynolds barked, wrestling with the controls.
From the dark hallway behind the cockpit, a faint sound of footsteps echoed — slow and deliberate, but with no one there.
"Who’s there?" Mills demanded, swinging a flashlight down the corridor.
Silence.
"Just your imagination," Reynolds said, though his voice was tight.
"Maybe," Daniels whispered, eyes wide.
Then, with a sickening groan, the cargo bay doors began sliding open.
"Cargo doors? In flight? What the hell?" Reynolds yelled.
"They won’t close," Harper shouted back, panic creeping in.
A blast of icy air swept through the plane, freezing everything it touched.
"Perfect. Just what we needed — a flying haunted house,"Mills said dryly.
The radio erupted again, this time with distorted laughter and cries intertwined with static.
Reynolds slammed his fist on the console.
"Cut it off!"
Harper tried, but the controls were frozen.
The plane pitched downward, instruments dying one by one.
"Brace for impact!" Reynolds roared.
Trees rushed up in a blur.
The crash was violent.
Metal twisted, glass shattered.
Silence followed, thick and heavy.
The B-29 lay broken in a cold, silent forest miles from Berlin.
Inside, frost still clung to the wreckage.
The crew — vanished.
And somewhere, carried on the wind, faint laughter echoed.