Saunders was describing a Tulagi mission which he was leading, with Frank "Fritz" Waskowitz in 41-2616 on his wing. When Japanese fighters attacked head-on Saunders expected them to come at him, but instead they made a beeline for his wingman in 41-2616.
Saunders is quoted as saying, "Fritz has the only off-color plane in the outfit. It is painted a sort of baby blue and Fritz calls it his blue goose".
The story appeared in many mainland newspapers on Sunday, August 23, 1942, and on the front page of The Honolulu Advertiser.
According to Robert Stitt, author of Boeing B-17 Fortress in RAF Coastal Command Service, "Early deliveries of the B-17E variant assigned Britain and dispatched to Cheyenne for modification for the RAF, including 41-2616, were painted in either Dark Olive Drab with Neutral Grey or Temperate Land with Deep Sky having been withdrawn from a pool at Seattle”.

So, was 41-2616’s “off-color” actually this predominantly blue RAF scheme, seen above in a United Air Lines photo of 41-2622 (and in some well-known color photos of 41-9141)?
If it was, there are still unanswered questions - if 41-2616 had Temperate Land upper surfaces, were they overpainted in Hawaii to match or complement the blue lower surfaces, was the name "The Blue Goose" painted on the nose, was there accompanying artwork?