| June
6, 1944 — The Polish Talent Cien
and a portion of the British Sixth Airborne Division,
in an attempt to link up with incoming Canadian
forces on Juno Beach, pushed south from the Orne
River to Banville, a small town just past the beachhead
at 7:22 A.M. on June 6. There, they met the world's
first Talent: Der Flieger.
Based on the French coast at
Fécamp, Der Flieger was alerted to
the invasion in the middle of the night.
By dawn the Übermensch
had downed nine fighters and two transport aircraft.
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Seeing
the invasion fleet gathered to the south, he headed
along the coast to assist German forces in the defense
of Normandy. Der Flieger sonic-boomed
Allied troops at Sword Beach, and seeing a furtive
group of soldiers securing the small shoreline town
of Banville, swept in low to identify them.
He flew too close. Cien
took a blind swipe at him with his power, knocking
Der Flieger from the air with a telekinetic
shadow hand. The Übermensch skidded
to a halt in the mud with his leg broken and two
ribs shattered.
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An
Allied combat photographer snapped a shot of the
Übermensch in the mud, his face contorted
in disgust and pain. The photograph made the cover
of Time with the legend The Super-Man
in Defeat, and became one of the most famous
photographs ever taken.
Despite Cien's best efforts,
Der Flieger fled the scene before he could
be captured, flying unsteadily off to the east.
Der Flieger was done with Normandy.
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