The heat came first-the kind that settles into your bones and never quite lets go. Then came the wind, kicking up sand through boots and rifles, through memory and time. But what stayed with him most wasn't the weather. It was the silence before the jump.
Patrick Donovan never expected to be among the first. Not to wear the boots of a paratrooper. Not to step out of a C-47 into a sky torn with tracer fire. But in 1942, when the world was on fire and history waited in the dust of North Africa, he was there.
From the brutal trials of training to the confusion of combat, Donovan's story is one of courage sharpened by fear, of loyalty forged in blood and grit. What began as a young man's escape from a quiet farm becomes a plunge into a war that will test everything-his endurance, his ideals, and his soul.
This is not a tale of medals or headlines. It is a ground-level story of the men who jumped without knowing where they'd land-and of the ghosts they brought home.