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Call to Arms

Page 38

by W. E. B Griffin


  “Congratulations,” Ernie said.

  “Excuse me?”

  “On being a Naval aviator,” she said.

  “Oh,” Stecker said. “Thank you.”

  “Now tell me about the Sainted Widow,” Ernie said.

  “I’m not sure I should,” Stecker said.

  “Think of me as a kindly old aunt,” Ernie said.

  “That would be hard,” Stecker said. “You don’t look anything like a kindly old aunt.”

  “I think I should tell you that my boyfriend is a Raider,” Ernie said. “Their idea of a good time is chewing glass. I have no way of knowing what he would do if he thought someone was paying me an unsolicited compliment.”

  “That would be ‘Killer’ McCoy,” Stecker said. “Pick’s told me all about him.”

  “Did he tell you that Killer McCoy and I were sharing living accommodations, without benefit of marriage, at what I have now learned to call Diego?” Ernie asked.

  “Yeah,” Stecker said. “As a matter of fact, he did.”

  “Well, now that he’s told you my shameful secret, you tell me his. What’s this Sainted Widow done to him?”

  “I don’t think she’s done anything to him,” Stecker said. “That’s what you could call the root of the problem.”

  By the time Pick walked in the door (in a crisp tropical worsted uniform, without a drop of sweat on him, which sorely tempted Stecker to spill the beer he handed him into his lap), Stecker had covered the dead-in-the-water romance between Pick and Martha Sayre Culhane in some detail.

  He had explained to Ernie that he believed, or at least hoped, that the romance was beginning to pass. Since the Navy had kept them busy flying, Pick simply didn’t have time to moon over his unrequited love. And when they did have a Sunday off, Pick drank—but not too much, for he knew he would have to fly the next day.

  Stecker went on to tell her that he thought it was a shame they hadn’t gone to Opa-locka for fighter training. That would have gotten Pick out of Pensacola. And once he was out of Pensacola, he believed that Martha Sayre Culhane would, however slowly, begin to fade. In his opinion, absence did not make the heart grow fonder.

  And then, after Pick arrived, his role and Ernie’s were reversed. Ernie, with a couple of drinks in her, revealed how much she missed Ken McCoy and how worried she was about him. Pick and Stecker tried to comfort her, after their peculiar fashion: Pick told her, for instance, that it was her romance she should be worried about, not Ken McCoy’s life. He told her that she was responsible for teaching McCoy bad habits. Which meant that at this very moment, he was probably on some sunny, wave-swept Hawaiian beach with some dame wearing a grass skirt.

  In time, Pick and Ernie got more than a little smashed. And Stecker found himself making the decisions and driving. They went to Carpenter’s Restaurant, where he made them eat deviled crabs and huge mounds of french-fried potatoes, to counter the alcohol.

  That didn’t seem to work with Pick, who slipped into a sort of maudlin stupor, but it seemed to sober up Ernie. Consequently, she was acutely aware of the look on Dick Stecker’s face when Martha Sayre Culhane walked into Carpenter’s with Captain Mustache and two other couples. And she followed his eyes and turned to him with a question on her face.

  Dick Stecker nodded as he put his finger quickly before his lips, and he then glanced at Pick, begging her not to let him know.

  She nodded her understanding of the situation.

  But there was nothing Dick Stecker could do when Ernie Sage saw Martha Sayre Culhane go into the ladies’ room. Ernie suddenly jumped to her feet and went in after her.

  When Martha Sayre Culhane came out of the stall, a young woman wearing a T-shirt with a large red Marine Corps emblem on was it sitting on the makeup counter. The young woman examined her shamelessly, and said “Hi!”

  “Hello,” Martha said, a little uncomfortably. She took her comb from her purse and ran it through her hair. Then she took out her lipstick and started to touch up her lips.

  “Funny,” Ernie said. “You really are nearly as beautiful as Pick thinks you are.”

  “I beg your pardon?”

  “You don’t look like a selfish bitch, either,” Ernie went on. “More like what Dick Stecker says, ‘the Sainted Widow.’ I guess you work on that, huh?”

  “Who the hell are you?”

  “Just one more Marine Corps camp-follower,” Ernie said.

  “I don’t know what this is all about, but I don’t like it,” Martha said.

  “We have something in common, believe it or not,” Ernie said.

  “I can’t imagine what that would be,” Martha said.

  “I got one of those telegrams,” Ernie said. “From good ol Frank Knox. He regretted that my man was ‘missing in action and presumed dead.’”

  Martha looked at Ernie.

  “I’m sorry,” she said.

  “As things turned out, he wasn’t dead,” Ernie said. “I told you that to explain what we had in common. I know what it’s like.”

  Martha started to say something, but stopped.

  “At the moment, I’m crossing my fingers again,” Ernie said. “No, I’m not. I’m praying. Mine’s back in the Pacific. He’s an officer in the Second Raider Battalion.”

  “What is it you want from me?” Martha said.

  “I want to talk to you about Pick,” Ernie said. “He’s in love with you.”

  “I don’t really think that’s true,” Martha said.

  “It’s true,” Ernie said. “Take it from me. I’ve known Pick since we used to play doctor. I know about him and women. He’s in love with you.”

  “Well, I don’t happen to be in love with him, not that it’s any of your business,” Martha snapped.

  “So what?” Ernie said. “Lie about it. You’re going to have to stop playing the sainted widow sooner or later. Give it up now. Give that poor, frightened, wonderful sonofabitch a couple of weeks, a couple of months, however long he’s got before they ship him off to the Pacific. It won’t cost you anything. You might even like it. I’ve never heard any complaints. And if you don’t, Martha, and he gets killed, too, you’ll regret it the rest of your life.”

  “You’re crazy,” Martha said. “My husband—”

  “Is dead,” Ernie said. “And he’s not coming back. I told you, I know what that feels like. Pick is alive. He’s in love with you. Stop being so goddamned selfish!”

  Ernie pushed herself off the counter and walked out of the room.

  When the Sainted Widow came out of the ladies’ room two minutes later, she looked as if she had been crying. She gazed around the room, found Pick, and stared at him for almost a minute before turning and rushing out of the restaurant.

  And a moment after that, Captain Mustache crossed the room, obviously in pursuit of the Sainted Widow. They did not return to the restaurant.

  Stecker would have really liked to ask what had gone on in the ladies’ room. He couldn’t ask, of course, with Pick sitting right there.

  (Two)

  Pearl Harbor, Territory of Hawaii

  8 August 1942

  In compliance with Operations Order (Classified SECRET) No. 71-42, from Commander in Chief, United States Pacific Fleet, Task Group 7.15 (Commander John M. Haines, USN) got underway at 0900 hours, Hawaiian time.

  Task Group 7.15 consisted of the submarines USS Argonaut (Lt. Commander William H. Brockman, Jr., USN) and USS Nautilus (Lt. Commander J. H. Pierce, USN); and Companies A and B, 2nd Raider Battalion, USMC (Lt. Colonel Evans F. Carlson, USMCR).

  The mission of Task Group 7.15 was to land a force of Marines on Makin Island, where they were to engage and destroy the enemy; to destroy any enemy matériel stocks they found; to destroy any buildings, radio facilities, and anything else of military or naval value; and then to withdraw.

  There was never any consideration given to holding Makin Island once it had been taken. It would have been impossible to supply, much less reinforce. And there was nothing the Americans wa
nted with the island anyway.

  It was a raid, the purpose of which was to force the Japanese to reinforce all of their islands, in order to attempt to prevent subsequent Raider raids. To do so, it was reasoned, would force the Japanese to assign troops and matériel to protect all their islands, and that the troops and matériel so assigned would therefore not be available for use elsewhere.

  There would also be some positive public relations aspects of a successful raid; the American ego was still smarting from Pearl Harbor and the fall of the Philippine Islands. In that sense, it would be the Navy’s answer to the Air Corps’s bombing of the Japanese homelands by a flight of B-25 aircraft commanded by Lieutenant Colonel Jimmy Doolittle.

  There were some cynics. They claimed it made absolutely no sense to spend so much time and effort putting several hundred Marines ashore on an island of little importance—and which we did not intend to keep, anyway. Such a raid would indeed force the Japanese to station men on all of their islands, but doing so would pose fewer problems for the Japs than it would, in the future, for the United States. After the Makin Raid, they believed, we would have to fight our way ashore on every island we wished to take and keep. And that would cost lives.

  There were even those who said that the whole Raider concept was a Chinese fire drill, because the President’s son was involved and because the Commandant didn’t have the balls to tell the President the whole idea was a drain on manpower and resources that could be better used elsewhere.

  The dissent was heard, duly noted, and ignored.

  The Argonaut2 was a one-of-a-kind submarine. She was designed in 1919 to be something of a copy of the German U-Cruiser class, and she was intended for use for both long-distance cruising and underwater mine laying. She was launched at Portsmouth on November 10, 1927, and commissioned on April 2, 1928. Powered by two German-made MAN diesel engines developing 3,175 horsepower, she was capable of making fifteen knots on the surface. And her electric motors would move her at eight knots submerged. She was armed with two six-inch cannon, three .30-caliber machine guns, and four 21-inch torpedo tubes. Immediately after Pearl Harbor, she had gone through a refit at Mare Island Navy Yard, converting her to a transport submarine.

  The Nautilus was one of two submarines of the Narwhal class. Generally similar to the Argonaut, she did not have a mine-laying capability. When she was launched at Mare Island in March 1930, she had MAN diesels, but these were replaced by Fairbanks Morse engines just before World War II. She had two aft-firing torpedo tubes plus four forward firing and was armed, like the Argonaut, with two 6-inch Naval cannon.

  Both vessels were considerably larger than “fleet” submarines of the period, and for this reason had been chosen to transport the elements of the 2nd Raider Battalion charged with making an attack upon the Japanese-held Makin atoll, which lay 2,029 nautical miles to the southwest, roughly halfway between Hawaii and Australia.

  The Argonaut and the Nautilus were led through the antisubmarine cables and other defenses of Pearl Harbor, and for some distance at sea by a patrol craft (PC 46), which stood by while (at 1500 hours) the submarines dived to test hull integrity and to determine trim. At 2015 hours, the Argonaut left the formation, under orders to visually reconnoiter the Makin atoll before the arrival of the Nautilus.

  At 2100 hours the patrol craft was released as escort and the Nautilus got underway to rendezvous with the Argonaut off Makin Atoll.

  (Three)

  Makin Island

  0530 Hours, 17 August 1942

  Not surprising Second Lieutenant Kenneth J. McCoy one little bit, the landing was all fucked up.

  The faithful Gunnery Sergeant Zimmerman, leading a couple of squads, was at his side as they lay in the sand fifteen yards off the beach. The trouble with the situation was that Zimmerman was with Able Company, and Lieutenant McCoy was performing his duties as a platoon leader with Baker Company. He didn’t know where Zimmerman was supposed to be, except that it wasn’t here.

  A large Raider came running up and dropped on his belly beside McCoy. “How’s it going?” he asked cheerfully.

  Under the circumstances, McCoy decided, since they were where they were, and since the large Raider was his little brother, he would not deliver a lecture on the proper manner for a corporal to address a commissioned officer and gentleman. Then he noticed the awesome weapon, a Boys antitank rifle,3 with which Tom was armed.

  “Where’d you get that, Tommy?” McCoy asked.

  “I gave it to him,” Zimmerman said, softly. “We got orders to bring the sonofabitch and he’s the only one big enough to carry it, much less shoot it.”

  McCoy chuckled.

  “I’m going to blow some Jap general a new asshole,” Tommy said confidently. “A big new asshole.”

  McCoy looked up at the sky. It was lighter than it had been; dawn was obviously breaking, but it was still dark. Too dark, he decided, to order Zimmerman to go look for his officers and find out where he was supposed to be. That would just add Zimmerman and his bunch to those already milling around in the dark.

  “Stay here,” McCoy said, and crawled back to the beach. Then he stood up, because he couldn’t see lying down.

  The force had been loaded into eighteen rubber boats. And they had planned to land at several points along the seaside shore of Butaritari Island. But at the last minute (when, in McCoy’s private opinion, Colonel Carlson had seen how fucked up the offloading from the subs into the boats had gone), Carlson had the word passed that everybody was to land at Beach “Z,” which was across the island from Government House.

  What everybody called “Makin Island” was correctly “Makin Atoll,” a collection of tiny islands forming a small hollow triangle around a deep-water lagoon. The base of the triangle, shaped like a long, low-sided “U,” was Butaritari Island, the largest of the islands. Off its northern point was Little Makin Island. When they had finished here, the Raiders were scheduled to attack and to destroy what personnel and matériel might be found there.

  What civilization there was on Butaritari Island was all on the lagoon side—wharves running out from warehouses and buildings to the deep water of the lagoon. To the north of the built-up area were Government Wharf and Government House, now the Japanese headquarters. That was where the vast bulk of the Japanese forces were supposed to be.

  McCoy counted rubber boats. He counted fifteen; that meant three were missing.

  On the beach somewhere out of sight? Or swamped?

  A trio of Raiders came running down the beach in a crouch, their weapons (Thompsons and Garands) at the ready.

  “Whoa!” McCoy ordered.

  Somewhat sheepishly they stopped, stood erect, and looked at him. Privately hoping it would set an example, McCoy had elected to arm himself with a Garand rather than with any of the array of gung ho automatic weapons in the arms room. He thought that the planned operation called for rifles…and not submachine guns that most people couldn’t shoot well anyway, or carbines, whose effectiveness as a substitute for a rifle he questioned.

  Their faces were streaked with black grease, and they were wearing what looked like, and in fact were, khaki uniforms that had been dyed black. There was no more India ink in the drafting offices at Camp Catlin, but the Raiders had the black uniforms Carlson couldn’t find in quartermaster warehouses anywhere.

  “We’ve been looking for you, Lieutenant,” the corporal said, somewhat defensively.

  “Where are you?” McCoy asked, clearly meaning the rest of the platoon.

  The corporal gestured down the beach behind him. “About a hundred yards, sir.”

  “You run into anybody from Able Company?” McCoy asked.

  “Yes, sir, there’s a bunch of them down there, sir,” the corporal said.

  “You two stay here,” McCoy ordered the two Raiders. Then he pointed at the corporal. “You go get the others,” he said, and pointed inland. “I’m about fifteen yards in there.”

  “Aye, aye, sir,” the corporal said, and starte
d down the beach.

  Colonel Carlson appeared, coming up the beach.

  McCoy saluted.

  “Oh, it’s you, McCoy,” Carlson said. “Getting your people sorted out?”

  “Yes, sir,” McCoy said. “I’ve got at least a platoon of Able Company with me. I’m about to send them down the beach.”

  “Good,” Carlson said. “But despite the confusion, so far so good.”

  “Yes, sir,” McCoy said.

  The unmistakable crack of a .30-06 cartridge broke the stillness, clearly audible above the hiss of the surf.

  “Oh, shit!” McCoy said, bitterly.

  There was no following sound of gunfire. Just the one shot.

  “What was that?” one of the Raiders asked, when neither Colonel Carlson nor McCoy spoke.

  “That was some dumb sonofabitch walking around with his finger on the trigger,” McCoy said furiously. “He might as well have blown a fucking bugle.”

  “I think this might be a good time for you to join your men, McCoy,” Colonel Carlson said, conversationally, and then walked back down the beach.

  XXI

  (One)

  Butaritari Island, Makin Atoll

  0700 Hours, 17 August 1942

  At a quarter to six, a runner from Lieutenant Plumley’s Able Company had reported to Colonel Carlson that his point (that is, the leading elements of Plumley’s troops) was at Government Wharf and that he had captured Government House without resistance. Carlson sent the runner back with orders for Plumley to move down the island in the direction of the other installations, that is to say, southeast, or to the left.

  Carlson had expected the bulk of Japanese forces to be in the vicinity of Government House, and had made his plans accordingly. Now it seemed clear to him that the Japanese were in fact centered around On Chong’s Wharf, about two miles away. If he had known that, he could have ordered Plumley to move quickly down the island, so that he could get as far as possible before he encountered resistance.

  But once the presence of the Raiders on Butaritari became known to the Japanese—and the goddamned fool who had fired his Garand had taken care of that—the situation would change rapidly. If he were the Japanese commander, Carlson reasoned, he would move up Butaritari’s one road as fast as he could, until he ran into the enemy.

 

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