I'll save typing the whole thing, I'll just begin typing when he sees the flame...
LONG FLIGHT HOME from Thunderbolt, by Robert S. Johnson
"FIRE! A gleaming tongue of flames licks my forehead. It flickers, disappears. Instantly it is here again, this time a searing fire sheet, erupting into the cockpit. The fire dances and swirls, disappears within a thick, choking cloud of smoke. Intense, blinding, sucked throught he shattered canopy. The draft is terror. The draft of air is Death, carrying the fire from theb ottom of the cockpit, over me, crackling before my face, leaping up and out through the smashed canopy.
The terror is eternity. Burn to death!
GET OUT!
I grab the canopy bar, grasping for breath, jerk it back with maniacal strength. The canopy jerks open, slides back six inches, and jams.
Trapped! The fire blossoms, roars ominously, Frantic, I reach up with both hands, pulling with every bit of strength I can command. The canopy won't budge.
Realization. The fighter burning. Flames and smoke in the cockpit. Oxygen flow cut off. Out of control, plunging. Fighters behind. Helpless.
New sounds. Grinding, rumbling noises. In front of me, the engine. Thumping, banging. Bullets, cannon shells in the engine; maybe it's on fire!
I can't see. I rub my eyes. No good. Then I notice the oil, spraying out fromt he damaged engine, a sheet of oil robbing me of sight, covering the front windscreen, cutting off my vision. I look to the side, barely able to look out.
Great, dark shapes. Reeling, rushing past me. No! The Thunderbolt plunges, flips crazily earthward. The shapes--the bombers! The bomber formations, unable to evade my hurtling fighter. How did I miss them? The shapes disappear as the Thunderbolt, railing flame and smoke, tumbles through the bombers, escaping total disaster by scant feet. Maybe less!
GET OUT!
I try, oh, God, how I try! Both feet against the instrument panel, brace myself, grasp the canopy bar with both hands. Pull--pull harder! Useless. It won't budge.
Still falling. Got to pull out of the dive. I drop my hands to the stick, my feet to the rudders. Left rudder to level the wings, back pressure on the stick to bring her out of the dive. There is still wind bursting with explosive force through the shattered canopy, but it is less deomoniacal with the fighter level, flying at less speed.
Still the flame. Now the fire touches, sears. I have become snared in a trap hurtling through space, a trap of vicious flames and choking smoke! I release the controls. Feet firmly against the instruments, both hands grasping the canopy bar. It won't move! Pull harder!
The Thunderbolt rears wildly, engine thumping. Smoke inside, oil spewing from the battered engine, a spray whipping back, almost blinding me to the outside world. It doesn't matter. The world is nothingness, only space, forever and ever down to the earth below. Up here, fire, smoke.
I've got to get out! Terror and choking increases, becomes frenzied desperation. Several times I jerk the Thunderbolt from her careening drops toward the earth, several more times I kick against the panel, pull with both hands. The canopy will not move. Six inches. Not a fraction more. I can't get out!
A miracle. Somehow, incredibly, flame disappears. The fire... the fire's out! Smoke boils into the cokcpit, swirls around before it answers the shrieking call of wind through the shattered glass. But there is no flame to knife into flesh, no flame.... Settle down! Think! I'm still alive!"
-SW