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In Danger's Path

Page 31

by W. E. B Griffin


  “That may be difficult,” he said.

  “We’re back to ‘difficult but not impossible,’ right?”

  The manager smiled at her.

  Ernestine Sage did not look at all like her father, but she was obviously a chip off the old block.

  “We will accommodate the gentleman, Miss Sage,” he said.

  “Now we come to payment,” Ernie said. “My gentleman friend has an account here, and will sign for whatever he buys. But I don’t want him to pay for what he buys, or to know, right now, that he won’t be paying for it. It’s sort of a surprise present.”

  “I understand. And should I bill Mr. Sage?”

  “No. I’m going to pay for this. You can either open an account for me—you can check my credit with Bergdorf Goodman, or the Park Avenue and Fifty-seventh Street branch of First National Bank—or I’ll send a check down here by messenger.”

  “So far as I am concerned, Miss Sage, you have just opened an account with us. And checking your credit won’t be necessary. I happen to know you’re employed.”

  “How do you know that?” Ernie asked, surprised.

  “Your father told me you’re the creative director for APP at BBD&O. He’s very proud of you.”

  “I’ll be damned,” Ernie said.

  “Shall we go see what we can do for your gentleman friend?” the manager said.

  When they arrived at the footwear department, they found Ken dubiously examining the loafers on his feet. The manager could not quite conceal his surprise when he saw how Ken was dressed.

  “I’m going to need some real shoes, too, right, Ernie?” McCoy said.

  “Oh, I don’t think so, sir,” the manager said. “Slip-ons like those are now considered appropriate for wear with just about anything.”

  McCoy looked at Ernie, who nodded in agreement.

  “Okay,” McCoy said. “I’ll take these.”

  “One in oxblood,” Ernie said. “And one in black.”

  McCoy considered that a moment, then shrugged.

  “What the hell,” he said. “Why not?”

  [TWO]

  * * *

  SECRET

  HQ USMC

  1705 09 MAR 43

  PRIORITY

  COMMANDING OFFICERS

  ALL USMC AIR BASES AND STATIONS IN CONTINENTAL US AND TERRITORY OF HAWAII ALL MAG IN CONTINENTAL US AND TERRITORY OF HAWAII

  ALL SEPARATE USMC AVIATION SQUADRONS AND MARINE AVIATION COMPLEMENTS IN CONTINENTAL US AND TERRITORY OF HAWAII

  SUBJECT: SOLICITATION OF VOLUNTEERS FOR HAZARDOUS DUTY

  1. YOU WILL IMMEDIATELY DETERMINE WHICH MARINE AVIATORS UNDER YOUR COMMAND ARE, OR HAVE BEEN, RATED AS COMMAND PILOTS OF PBY5, PBY5A AND R4-D AIRCRAFT.

  2. YOU WILL IMMEDIATELY PERSONALLY INTERVIEW EACH SUCH MARINE AVIATOR AND AFFORD HIM THE OPPORTUNITY TO VOLUNTEER FOR A CLASSIFIED MISSION INVOLVING GREAT PERSONAL RISK IN A COMBAT AREA LASTING APPROXIMATELY NINETY DAYS.

  3. THE NAMES OF VOLUNTEERS WILL BE TRANSMITTED WITHIN SEVENTY—TWO (72) HOURS OF RECEIPT OF THIS MESSAGE BY THE MOST EXPEDITIOUS MEANS AVAILABLE CLASSIFIED SECRET TO HEADQUARTERS USMC, ATTENTION BRIG GEN D.G. MCINERNEY USMC.

  4. THE NAMES OF MARINE AVIATORS WHO ARE QUALIFIED AS IN PARA 1 ABOVE, AND REPEAT AND WHO HAVE 1,000 HOURS OR MORE OR WHO HAVE BEEN RATED IN PBY5, PBY—5A AND R4-D AIRCRAFT OR A COMBINATION THEREOF AND WHO DID NOT REPEAT NOT ELECT TO VOLUNTEER FOR THE MISSION DESCRIBED IN PARA 2 ABOVE WILL SIMILARLY BE TRANSMITTED WITHIN SEVENTY-TWO (72) HOURS OF RECEIPT OF THIS MESSAGE BY MOST EXPEDITIOUS MEANS AVAILABLE

  CLASSIFIED SECRET TO HEADQUARTERS USMC ATTENTION BRIG GEN D.G. MCINERNEY USMC.

  BY DIRECTION OF THE COMMANDANT:

  D.G. MCINERNEY BRIG GEN USMC

  SECRET

  * * *

  [THREE]

  The 21 Club

  21 West Fifty-second Street

  New York City, New York

  1930 9 March 1943

  “There they are,” Mrs. Carolyn Spencer Howell said, pointing across the crowded room, and then asking softly, “What’s wrong with the way he’s dressed? He looks fine to me.”

  Colonel Banning saw that Captain McCoy was now attired in a muted blue-gray herringbone jacket; a white button-down-collar shirt; and a regimentally striped necktie. The legs he had stretched out beside his table were covered with gray flannel trousers. He was wearing oxblood loafers and gray stockings.

  Ernie did a good job—and damned quickly, Banning thought. If it wasn’t for that GI haircut, he’d look like he belongs in here.

  “That’s not the same guy I rode up here with on the train,” Banning said. “That’s Ernie’s father with them, probably. Her secretary said she was going to meet him here.”

  At that moment, Ernie spotted them and waved them over.

  “We’ll be joining Miss Sage,” Carolyn said to the head-waiter, who followed the nod of her head, spotted the Sages, and then unfastened the red velvet-covered chain and passed them into the dining room.

  From the look on his face when they approached the table, Ernest Sage liked the looks of Carolyn Howell.

  Well, why not? Banning thought. Carolyn’s tall, graceful, willowy, chic, and damned good-looking. Just because you become a father doesn’t mean you can no longer appreciate women.

  Ernie gave her cheek to Carolyn to be kissed.

  They’re two of a kind, really, Banning thought somewhat unkindly. Two very nice young women sleeping with Marines they aren’t married to and don’t give much of a damn who knows it.

  “I hope we’re not intruding,” Banning said.

  “Not at all,” Ernest Sage said, snapped his fingers to attract a waiter’s attention, and signaled for him to bring two chairs to the table.

  “Mr. Sage, this is Colonel Banning and Mrs. Howell,” McCoy said.

  “How do you do?” Sage said.

  He picked up on that “Mrs. Howell,” Banning thought. Confirmation came when Ernie’s father’s eyes dropped to Carolyn’s hand, looking for a wedding ring. There was none.

  Would I put a wedding ring on that finger if there wasn’t already a Mrs. Edward J. Banning? Of course I would. Do I regret marrying Milla? I do not. So what does that make me, a would-be bigamist? Or just a no-good sonofabitch for getting involved with Carolyn, getting her involved with me?

  “You look very elegant tonight, Ken,” Carolyn said. “How’s your face?”

  “Excuse me?”

  “Ed told me about the rash,” Carolyn said. “I hope I didn’t embarrass you?”

  “No,” McCoy answered after a pause that wasn’t quite awkward. “Of course not. The medics said as long as I don’t shave, it will clear up.”

  Ernest Sage looked carefully at McCoy’s face. He could see nothing remotely resembling a rash.

  I wonder what that’s all about? Ernest Sage wondered. That rash on his face is obviously hogwash. He had to think quick when she asked him about it; he didn’t know what she was talking about.

  But she’s right. He does look good in civilian clothes.

  Why the hell couldn’t Ernie fall in love with some nice young man who is 4-F and doesn’t have to concoct stories about why he’s wearing civilian clothing.

  “I called your office,” Banning said to Ernie. “Your secretary told me she thought you were coming here.”

  “Darlene talks too much,” Ernie replied, and then: “Oh, hell, I didn’t mean that the way it sounded. I’m glad to see you.”

  “And I’m very happy to meet you, Colonel,” Ernest Sage said. “I understand you’re Ken’s commanding officer?”

  “In a manner of speaking, sir,” Banning said.

  “He and Ken are old friends, Daddy,” Ernie said. “They were in Shanghai together.”

  We weren’t exactly friends in Shanghai, Banning thought. The Corps frowns on captains getting friendly with corporals. But we’re friends now, and obviously McCoy thought of himself as my friend when he was Corporal McCoy in Shanghai. Otherwise he wouldn’t have leaned on Zimmerman and hi
s Chinese woman to help Milla. Zimmerman didn’t do that out of the goodness of his heart.

  “We’re working together on a project, Mr. Sage,” Banning said. “Since I’m senior to Ken, that makes me sort of his commanding officer.”

  “For General Pickering, right?” Ernest Sage said. “Now of the OSS, whatever the hell that is.”

  “Yes, sir,” Banning said.

  “What kind of a project? Or is that an impolite question?”

  “Well, tomorrow morning Ken and I are going to Fort Monmouth to look at some new shortwave radios,” Banning said. Fort Monmouth, New Jersey, was the “Home of the Army Signal Corps”; the U.S. Army Signal Corps Laboratories were located on the base.

  “Really? What kind of radios?”

  “Daddy, stop!” Ernie said firmly. “You’re putting him on the spot.”

  “I’m sorry, Colonel,” Ernest Sage said. “I didn’t mean to.”

  “We’re really not supposed to talk about what we’re doing,” Banning said. “I personally don’t think this place is crawling with Japanese spies—or any other kind—but orders are orders.”

  “I’m not asking when he would be going, or where,” Sage pursued, “but is whatever you’re doing going to take Ken away anytime soon?”

  Banning looked at McCoy, who shrugged, and then at Carolyn.

  “I’m afraid so,” Banning said. “Both of us.”

  Banning saw the pained look in Carolyn’s eyes, but saw, too, that she wasn’t surprised.

  “And for how long?” Ernie asked brightly.

  “We don’t know that, Ernie,” Banning said.

  “In other words, for a long time,” she said bitterly. “My God, he just got back!”

  “There’s a whole division of Marines in Australia, Ernie,” McCoy said, “who went over there a year ago, took Guadalcanal, and are now training to take some other island. They haven’t been back home since they left, and they have no idea when they will get back.”

  “That’s supposed to make me feel better?” she challenged. “It doesn’t.”

  “We have tonight,” Carolyn said. “Let’s be grateful for what we have.”

  “Live today, for tomorrow they die, right?” Ernie said.

  “Knock it off, Ernie,” McCoy said.

  She looked at him, then at Carolyn.

  “I’m sorry. I shouldn’t have said that,” she said.

  “Let’s talk about where we’re going to have dinner,” Carolyn said.

  [FOUR]

  Apartment 7B

  705 Park Avenue

  New York City, New York

  2305 9 March 1943

  Carolyn Spencer Howell, fresh from the shower and wearing a pink negligee, stood in the door of her bathroom and brushed her hair, waiting for Lieutenant Colonel Ed Banning to notice her.

  He was sitting in his pajamas, propped up in the bed, reading the Daily News. A bottle of Rémy Martin cognac and two balloon glasses sat on the bedside table.

  After she had had time to consider once again that he was a really handsome man, and that she loved him very much, he sensed her eyes on him and let the Daily News drop onto his lap.

  “I have a profound philosophical insight to share with you,” she said.

  “And what would that profound philosophical insight be?”

  “I hate this goddamned war, and by extension, the goddamned United States Marine Corps, and the goddamned OSS.”

  “Did this great truth suddenly appear to you, or did something trigger it?”

  “Ken,” she said.

  “I don’t think Ken can be blamed for the war, the Marine Corps, or the OSS,” Banning said.

  “He looked so nice in Jack and Charley’s,” Carolyn said. “They looked so nice.”

  “Jack and Charley’s?” Banning asked, confused.

  “Jack and Charley Kriendler own the 21 Club,” she said.

  “I didn’t know that,” Banning said. “I’m just a simple Marine from South Carolina. But yeah, the Killer looked fine. Thanks to Ernie. I didn’t know he even knew what Brooks Brothers was.”

  “You know what I thought? In Jack and Charley’s 21 Club?” she asked.

  “I think you’re about to tell me.”

  “There we were, the nice young man and the nice young woman, in love, and the slightly older female and her gentleman friend, all dressed up—ignoring for the moment your goddamned uniform—and wouldn’t it be nice if we could all go home to our respective apartments after agreeing to have the same kind of a night out, say, next week? Or maybe decide to go to the shore for the weekend.”

  Banning didn’t reply.

  “Instead of pretending that everything was hunky-dory,” Carolyn went on, “and that the two of you are not going God only knows where, and God only knows when, to do God only knows what, except that either or both or you are liable to be killed doing it.”

  “To coin a phrase,” Banning said, “there’s a war on, you may have heard.”

  “I think I did hear something about that,” she said.

  “I don’t know what you want me to say, sweetheart,” he said.

  “I don’t expect you to say anything,” Carolyn said. “I just wanted you to know how I feel.”

  “I wish things were different,” Banning said, and then added: “As soon as we finish what we have to do here—which will probably take a couple of weeks—I’m going to Chungking, China, where I will assume the duties of staff officer on the staff of the U.S. Mission to Generalissimo Chiang Kai-shek.”

  “You’re serious?” she asked, but it was more of a statement.

  Banning nodded.

  “Ken, too?”

  “Ken, too.”

  “Why do I suspect—feminine intuition?—that that’s not the truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth? I like Ken, you know that, but I can’t see him passing a tray of canapés around. Or you either, for that matter.”

  “It’s all I can tell you,” Banning said. “I probably—probably hell—shouldn’t have told you that much. What I did tell you was the truth.”

  Carolyn went off at a tangent: “What’s going to happen to them, after the war?”

  “I suppose they’ll get married and live more or less happily ever after.”

  “They’re from different worlds,” Carolyn said.

  “How about ‘love conquers all’?”

  “You think that will apply to you and me, after the war?”

  “I have a wife, Carolyn,” Banning said.

  “Maybe the Mormons have the right idea. I’d be willing to share you, if that was the only alternative to not having you at all.”

  He shrugged helplessly but didn’t reply.

  “You think she’s still alive?”

  He raised his hands in a gesture of helplessness. “I don’t know,” he said.

  “And if she is still alive, will she be the same woman you married? I suppose what I’m asking is will you still be in love with her?”

  “‘In sickness and in health,’” he quoted, “‘until death doth you part.’”

  “You left out ‘forsaking all others,’” Carolyn said, a little too brightly.

  He didn’t like what he heard in her voice.

  “Would you rather I left, Carolyn?” Banning asked. “Maybe that would be the best—”

  “It’s midnight,” she said practically, interrupting him. “Where would you go? You’d never find a hotel room this time of night. And besides, I meant what I said about maybe the Mormons have the right idea.”

  “You’re getting the short end of this stick,” he said.

  “I know,” she said. “But I knew that when we started, didn’t I?”

  “If you want me to say I feel guilty as hell…”

  “I know that,” Carolyn said. “If you didn’t feel guilty, I don’t think I’d love you. Or at least love you as much.” She turned and went back into the bathroom.

  Banning stared at the bathroom door for a moment, then angrily picked up the newspaper
and threw it across the room.

  [FIVE]

  Office of the Commander in Chief, Pacific

  U.S. Navy Base

  Pearl Harbor, Territory of Hawaii

  1405 11 March 1943

  Commander J. Howard Young, USN, Flag Secretary to Admiral Chester W. Nimitz, stood in CINCPAC’s door and waited until the Admiral noticed him. “Admiral Wagam is here, Admiral,” he said. “With his aide.”

  Nimitz’s face grew pensive: Lewis knows more about submarines, he was thinking, has more nuts-and-bolts knowledge, than Dan Wagam or I do. In a moment he replied, “Ask them both to come in.”

  Rear Admiral (Upper Half) Daniel J. Wagam, USN, and his aide-de-camp, Lieutenant Chambers D. Lewis III, USN, marched into the room, stopped, and stood at attention.

  “At ease, gentlemen,” Nimitz replied. “Good afternoon.”

  “Good afternoon, Admiral,” the two replied in unison.

  “Sit down,” Nimitz said, gesturing to a pair of upholstered chairs facing his desk. “I’m about to have some coffee. Would you like some?”

  Moments later, when they all had coffee, he said, “We have heard from General Pickering.”

  He opened the center drawer of his desk, took out a large manila envelope stamped TOP SECRET and handed it to Wagam.

  “Three possibilities, Dan,” Nimitz said with a smile. “The General either has a limited knowledge of correct military form, or none, or he does, and doesn’t give a damn.”

  “I see what you mean, sir,” Admiral Wagam said, chuckling.

  Lewis had to wait to satisfy his own curiosity about that until Admiral Wagam had finished reading the communication. Then Nimitz said, “I think Lewis better have a look at that, too.”

  Brigadier General Pickering’s proposed Operations Plan was in the form of a personal letter to Admiral Nimitz:

  * * *

  T O P S E C R E T

  OFFICE OF STRATEGIC SERVICES WASHINGTON

  0905 GREENWICH 11 MARCH 1943

  VIA SPECIAL CHANNEL DUPLICATION FORBIDDEN

  CINCPAC HAWAII EYES ONLY ADMIRAL CHESTER W. NIMITZ

 

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