A STORY ABOUT A REAL MAN 3Q0 clouds that looked like soap-suds. The sky was deserted; only on the horizon small dots could be seen against the background of ^ distant clouds—they were the Junkers scattering in different directions. Alexei looked at his watch and was amazed. It had seemed to him that the fight had lasted at least half an hour and that his fuel must be running low; but the watch showed that it had lasted only three and a half minutes. "Alive?" he asked, glancing at his follower who had "crawled over" and was now flying parallel with him. Amidst ^ the jumble of pounds in his ear-phones he heard a distant, exultant voice: "Alive___Down-----Look down___" Down below, in a battered, mutilated, hilly valley, fuel tanks were burning in several places, and clouds of dense smoke were rising in columns in the still air. But Alexei did not look at these burning remains of enemy planes. His eyes were glued upon the green-grey beetles that were scurrying widely across the fields. They had crept up to the enemy's positions along two hollows and those in front were already crossing the trenches. Spouting red sparks from their trunks, they crawled through the enemy's lines and crept on farther and farther, although shots still flashed in their rear and the smoke from the German guns was visible. Meresyev realised what these hundreds of beetles in the depths of the enemy's shattered positions meant. He was witnessing what the Soviet people, and the people of all freedom-loving countries, read about in the newspapers next day with joy and exultation. On one of the sectors of the Kursk Salient, the army, after a terrific artillery preparation which lasted for two hours, pierced the enemy's defences, entered the breach and cleared the road for the Soviet forces that had passed to the offensive. Of the nine machines in Captain Cheslov's squadron two failed to return to their base. Nine Junkers were shot down. Nine to two was certainly a good score when counting machines. But the loss of two comrades marred the joy of victory. On alighting from their machines the airmen did not exult or shout and gesticulate in ardent discussion of the battle, and live over again the dangers