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Herman Wouk - The Caine Mutiny

Page 31

by The Caine Mutiny(Lit)


  "By the bye," said Queeg suddenly to Maryk, "did I see our friend Stilwell at muster or didn't I? Seems to me I didn't."

  "Why, sir-" Maryk began, but Willie quickly struck in: "Stilwell is here, sir."

  "Are you sure?" said the captain dryly. "How do you know he hasn't gone over the hill?"

  Willie said, addressing Maryk more than the captain, "Well, sir, I saw him at the gangway just a few seconds after muster."

  "I see." The captain appeared convinced. He grumbled, ris-ing from the couch, "Well, no reason for him to be late for muster, is there, Mr. Maryk? Put him on report."

  Willie thought he had saved the situation. He was appalled when Maryk said, "Sir, I gave Stilwell a seventy-two."

  Queeg sank back on the couch, astounded. "You did? And just why did you do that, sir?"

  "He had a telegram that his mother was dying."

  "Did you think of calling me and asking my permission?"

  "Yes, sir."

  "Well, why didn't you? Did you verify the telegram through the Red Cross?"

  "No, sir."

  "Why didn't you?"

  Maryk looked at the captain, his face dull and blank.

  "Well, let's get on with ship's business, Mr. Maryk. Where's the work progress chart?"

  "In my room, sir."

  Willie trembled for Maryk and himself.

  In the exec's room, Queeg burst out, "God damn it, Steve, what kind of stupid trick was that with Stilwell?"

  "Well, sir, an emergency-"

  "Emergency, my behind! I want you to write the Red Cross and find out whether his mother died or whether she was sick at all, or what the exact truth was. I owe all the trouble I had with ComServPac to that little sneak. Remember when we cut the towline? That started it-"

  (Maryk was startled. It was the first time the captain had ever admitted that the line had been cut.)

  "-and it was Stilwell's fault. Imagine a helmsman not warn-ing the commanding officer that the ship was in such danger! I know why he kept his mouth shut, of course. I'd bawled him out in the morning for being too goddamn fresh and making his own decisions at the helm, and he was just playing it real smart, see, letting me get myself in trouble. Kay. I know his kind. These vindictive little troublemakers that bear grudges are just my meat. I'm gunning for that little squirt and I'm go-ing to get him, believe you me. You write the Red Cross this morning, do you hear?"

  "Aye aye, sir."

  "Let's see your chart."

  They discussed the progress of repairs for a quarter of an hour. Queeg was not very interested; he checked off the items and asked a desultory question or two about each. He stood, putting on his raincoat. "Steve, there's one thing we'd better get straight," he said casually, fastening his belt. "I don't ap-preciate your evasiveness and general sloppy handling in this Stilwell deal one bit. And I want to know frankly whether you're going to straighten up and fly right." He glanced side-wise. The exec's face was set in a miserable frown. "It's ob-vious to me that Stilwell has your sympathy. That's all very well. But let me remind you that you're my executive officer. I know damn well that the whole ship is against me. I can handle that. If you're against me, too, why I can handle that, too. There are fitness reports to be made out in due time. You'd just better make up your mind whose side you're on."

  "Sir, I know I was wrong not to call you about Stilwell," the exec said haltingly, rubbing his moist palms together and looking down at them. "I'm not against you, sir. I've made one bad mistake. I won't repeat it in the future, Captain."

  "Is that a man-to-man promise, Steve, or are you just ap-plying the grease?"

  "I don't know how to apply grease, sir. As far as my fitness report goes you'd be justified in giving me an Unsat in loyalty, on the Stilwell deal. But that's the first and last time."

  Queeg held out his hand to the exec, who rose from his bunk and grasped it. "I accept what you say, and I'm willing to for-get this incident," Queeg said. "I regard you as a damn good officer, Steve, far and away the best on the ship, and I consider myself lucky to have you. The rest are willing enough, and bright, but there isn't a sailor among them, and the two new ones don't look like prize packages, either-"

  "I think we have a pretty good wardroom, sir-"

  "Why, I said so. For a lot of wartime recruits, they're fine. But you and I have to run this ship. Now, I'm well aware that I'm not the easiest man in the world to get along with, and not the smartest either. I probably have done a lot of things that strike you as damned queer, and I'll probably go right on doing them. I can only see one way to run this ship, Steve, and come hell or high water that's how it's going to be run. And you're my exec, and so you're in the middle. I know all about that. I was exec for the unholiest son of a bitch in the Navy for three months, and during that time I did my duty, and was the second unholiest son of a bitch. That's how it goes."

  "Yes, sir."

  With a friendly smile, Queeg said, "Well, I'm off."

  "I'll walk you down, sir."

  "Why, thank you, Steve. That'll be very pleasant."

  In the days that followed the Caine was hastily put back together by the yard workmen, none of its parts much the bet-ter for the disassembly; and the general hope, as in the case of a clock taken apart by a child, was not that it would perform in an improved manner, but rather that it might begin ticking again as well as before. Some of the worst decay in the en-gineering plant was patched and the ship had new radars. Otherwise it was the same mangy old Caine. Nobody knew why the overhaul time had been cut in half, but Keefer was vocal on the point, as usual. "Someone finally figured out that the bucket won't hold together for more than one invasion, any-way," he theorized. "So they just souped her up enough for one last gasp."

  On the thirtieth of December, the Caine steamed out through the Golden Gate at sunset, minus some twenty-five of her crew, who had elected court-martial for missing ship rather than another cruise with Queeg. Willie Keith was on the bridge, and his spirits were low as the last hills slipped past the bow, and the ship issued forth on the purple sea. He knew this meant a long, long parting from May. There would be hundreds of thousands of miles of steaming, and probably many battles, before the ship would come into these waters again with its bow pointed the other way. The sun, dead ahead, sinking beneath ragged banks of dark clouds, shot out great spokes of red light which fanned across the western sky. It was an uncomfortable similitude of the flag of Japan.

  But he had a good steak dinner in the wardroom, and he wasn't posted for a night watch. And what cheered him most of all was that he went to sleep in a room, not the clipping shack. He had inherited Carmody's bunk, and Paynter was his new roommate.

  With a sense of great luxury and well-being, Willie crawled to the narrow upper bunk and slid between the fresh, rough Navy sheets. He lay only a few inches beneath the plates of the main deck. He had not much more room than he would have had under the lid of a coffin. A knotty valve of the fire main projected downward into his stomach. The stateroom was not as large as the dressing closet in his Manhasset home. But what did all that matter? From the clipping shack to this bunk was a great rise in the world. Willie closed his eyes, lis-tened with pleasure to the hum of the ventilators, and felt in his bones the vibration of the main engines, transmitted through the springs of his bunk. The ship was alive again. He felt warm, and safe, and at home. Drowsiness came over him almost at once, and he slept deliciously.

  PART FIVE

  THE MUTINY

  19

  The Circle of Compliance

  Any recent book of military history is likely to contain the remark that by the beginning of 1944 World War II was really won. Quite rightly, too. The great turning points, Guadalcanal, El Alamein, Midway, and Stalingrad, were in the past. Italy had surrendered. The murdering Germans were at last recoil-ing. The Japanese, their meager power spread thin over a swollen empire, had begun to crack. The industrial power of the Allies was coming to flood; that of their enemies was wan-ing. It was a bright pictu
re.

  But Ensign Keith had a worm's-eye view of the war re-markably different from that of the post-war historians. Stand-ing in the black cold wheelhouse of the Caine at midnight on New Year's Eve, as the ship plowed its old snout through the murky sea toward the west, he took a very gloomy view of the world situation.

  In the first place, he decided, he had been an idiot to go into the Navy instead of the Army. Russia was doing the real dirty work in Europe. The smart man's place in this war-unlike the last-was in the infantry, wallowing in idleness in England while the asses who had taken refuge in the Navy tossed on sickening seas, on the way to assault the terrible barrier of the Japanese mid-Pacific islands. His destiny now was coral and blasted palms and spitting shore batteries and roaring Zeros--and mines, hundreds of them, no doubt-and the bottom of the sea, perhaps, in the end. Meantime his opposite numbers in the Army would be visiting Canterbury Cathedral or the birth-place of Shakespeare arm in arm with pretty English girls, whose good will toward Americans was already a global legend.

  It seemed to Willie that the war against Japan would be the largest and deadliest in human history, and that it would prob-ably end only in 1955 or 1960, upon the intervention of Rus-sia, a decade after the collapse of Germany. How could the Japanese ever be dislodged from their famed "unsinkable car-riers," the chain of islands, swarming with planes which could massacre any approaching fleet? There would be, perhaps, one costly Tarawa a year. He was sure he was headed for the forth-coming one. And the war would drag on at that rate until he was bald and middle-aged.

  Willie didn't have a historian's respect for the victories at Guadalcanal, Stalingrad, and Midway. The stream of news as it burbled by his mind left only a confused impression that our side was a bit ahead in the game, but making painful slow work of it. He had often wondered in his boyhood what it must have been like to live in the stirring days of Gettysburg and Waterloo; now he knew, but he didn't know that he knew. This war seemed to him different from all the others: diffuse, slogging, and empty of drama.

  He was on his way to fight in battles as great as any in the histories. But these would appear to him mere welters of nasty, complicated, tiresome activity. Only in after years, reading books describing the scenes in which he had been engaged, would he begin to think of his battles as Battles. Only then, when the heat of youth was gone, would he come to warm himself with the fanned-up glow of the memory that he, too, Willie Keith, had fought on Saint Crispin's Day.

  For two days the Caine wallowed through gray cold rainy weather. There was the usual eating of damp sandwiches while clinging to stanchions, and sleeping in fits between pitches and rolls. Contrasted to the golden days of shore leave, this spell of misery seemed worse to the officers and crew than any they had ever undergone. There was a general feeling that they were all damned forever to a floating wet hell.

  On the third day they broke into the sunny blue of the South Seas. Dank pea jackets, sweaters, and windbreakers vanished. Officers in creased khakis and crew in dungarees began to look familiar to each other. Furniture was unroped. Hot meals were resumed at breakfast time. The pervading gloom and taciturnity gave way to a freshet of laughing reminiscence and boasts about the leave period. In a way, the short-handedness of the crew helped the recovery process. Those who had pre-ferred court-martial to further adventures with Captain Queeg were the crafty, the discontented, the easily discouraged. The sailors who had returned to man the Caine were jolly boys, ready to take the bad with the good, and fond of the old ship, however heartily and horribly they cursed it.

  On this day Willie took a mighty leap upward in life. He stood the noon-to-four watch as officer of the deck. Keefer was present to correct any disastrous mistake, and Captain Queeg himself perched in his chair throughout the watch, alternately dozing or blinking placidly in the sunshine. Willie conducted a faultless watch. It was a simple matter of staying on station in the screen while the convoy zigzagged. Whatever his inner shakiness, he kept a bold front, and maneuvered the ship firmly. When the watch was over he penciled in the log:

  12 to 4-Steaming as before.

  Willis Seward Keith

  Ensign, USNR

  He had signed many logs for port watches, but this was differ-ent. He put an extra flourish to his signature, and thrilled as though he were entering his name in a historic document.

  In a state of quiet exaltation, he went down the ladders to the wardroom, and ripped merrily into a stack of decoded mes-sages. He kept at it until the new steward's mate, Rasselas, a sweet-faced, pudgy colored boy with huge brown eyes, touched his arm and begged permission to lay the table for dinner. Willie folded away his codes, poured a cup of coffee from the Silex, and lay on the wardroom couch with his legs up, sipping. The radio was purring a Haydn quartet; the boys in the radio shack had not yet noticed and strangled it. Rasselas spread a fresh white cloth, and clinked the silver into place. From the pantry, where Whittaker in his new khaki uniform of a chief steward lorded it over the mess boys, there floated an aroma of roast beef. Willie sighed with contentment, and snuggled in the corner of the gently rocking couch. He looked around at the wardroom, freshly sprayed with a light green paint, its brown leather fittings renewed, the brass polished, the chairs gleaming. After all, he said to himself, there were worse places in the world than the wardroom of the Caine.

  The other officers came straggling in, shaved, dressed in clean clothes, good-humored, and hungry. All the old jokes were brought out. They seemed funny and gay to Willie: Harding's procreative fertility, Keefer's novel, the foulness of the ship's fresh water ("Paynter's Poison"), Maryk's New Zealand girl of the seven warts, and, latest of all, Willie Keith's stature as a Don Juan. The officers and sailors of the ship had caught glimpses of May Wynn during the overhaul, and her voluptuousness had become a matter of fable. Linked with the remembrance of the pretty nurses who had visited Willie in Pearl Harbor, the appearance of May had established for the ensign a reputation for mystic power over women.

  It was a fine new topic for wardroom banter. Sex was the subject, therefore anybody could be a comedian. A properly timed grunt was a great witticism. Willie for his part was de-lighted. He protested, and denied, and pretended to be vexed, and kept on prolonging the joke long after the others were ready to drop it; and sat down to dinner in very high spirits indeed. He felt a warm bond with the other officers, made stronger by the presence of the two bashful newcomers, Jor-gensen and Ducely. He realized now how green, how intrusive, he and Harding must have seemed five months ago to the vanished Gorton, Adams, and Carmody. He put a spoonful of pea soup to his lips, and at that instant the ship passed over a high swell and pitched violently. He noticed the practiced motion of his arm with which he neutralized the pitching and kept the spoon from spilling even a drop; and he uttered a low happy laugh, and drank it off.

  After dinner he said to Ducely, as the fragile-looking ensign was about to leave the wardroom, "Let's have a walk on the forecastle, shall we? Have to start talking about communica-tions sometime."

  "Yes, sir," said his new assistant meekly.

  They stepped through the door of the forecastle into a cool purple twilight. The only brightness was a patch of fading gold in the west. "Well, Ducely." Willie rested one leg on the star-board bitts, and leaned on the life lines with both hands, enjoy-ing the flow of the salt wind. "Getting used to the Caine?"

  "As much as I ever will, I guess. Horrible fate, isn't it?"

  Willie turned an annoyed glance at the ensign. "I suppose so. Every ship has good points and bad-"

  "Oh, of course. I guess there isn't much to do on one of these old rattletraps, which is something. And then I suppose we'll spend most of our time in Navy yards getting patched up, which suits me, too. If it only weren't so cramped and filthy! The wardroom is like a chicken coop."

  "Well, you get more or less used to it, Ducely. I guess you don't like the clip shack too much, eh?"

  "It's revolting. I almost died in there the first night. Why, that stack gas!"<
br />
  "Awful, isn't it?" said Willie, with huge enjoyment.

  "Abominable."

  "Well, after a while you won't mind it so much."

  "No fear. I don't sleep there any more."

  The grin faded from Willie's face. "Oh? Where do you sleep?"

  "In the ship's office, on the half deck. Nobody uses it at night. I have a folding cot. It's swell in there. Real airy."

  This information irritated Willie extremely. "I don't think the captain will approve of that. He's very particular about-"

  "I asked him, sir. He said I could sleep anywhere that I could find six vacant feet."

 

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