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EPILOGUE
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Also By Garrett Hutson
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1
Friday, July 2, 1937
Douglas Bainbridge wasn’t prepared for how much he’d missed the noise, the stench, and the crowd of Shanghai. After six weeks away, the sight of the downtown skyline, the honking of the car horns, and the blasts of ship whistles in the harbor caused his heart to soar as the cruiser dropped anchor in the middle of the crowded Huang Po River, opposite the Garden Bridge.
Sailors in white shore uniforms gathered near the middle of the starboard rail, along with a half-dozen marines in tan shore uniforms, while a trio of sampans rowed up from the Shanghai side of the river. An ensign tossed down a rope ladder to the Chinese operator of the first sampan. The operator tied the bottom of the ladder to the side of his boat, and signaled up to the ensign, who began directing sailors down two at a time.
“You got shore leave, Commander?”
Doug turned around to see the smiling face of Benjamin Trebinski, Seaman First Class. Ben was a couple of inches shorter than Doug, perhaps five-foot-ten, but he was broader. His crooked grin formed a dimple in his round cheeks, and his blue eyes shined with excitement.
Next to him stood Seaman Second Class Nick Bonadio, a wiry sailor with thick black hair under his white sailor cap. He was looking off toward shore and rubbing his hands together in anticipation.
“I live in Shanghai.” Doug didn’t want to explain that since he wasn’t officially part of the ship’s crew, he didn’t have to request shore leave when they docked in their home port.
“Boy, I wish I did!” Ben enthused. “I’ve had shore leave here a few times now, and it’s one hell of a town, I’ll say that.”
Doug laughed at Ben’s enthusiasm. “There is no end of entertaining things to do here.” He glanced up to see Commander Rose stepping out of the bridge and coming down the metal stairs—called a “ladder” onboard Navy ships, even when they were real stairs. “Would you boys like to go in front of me?”
“That would be swell!” Ben said, his grin lighting up his face. “You don’t mind, Commander?”
“Not at all.” Doug motioned the group of seamen ahead of him.
“Thanks, Commander,” Nick Bonadio said, giving Doug a playful salute as he passed.
Doug returned the salute with a chuckle and a shake of his head. He’d never been much of a stickler for military salutes. Still, when seamen Heiselmann and Aikins followed Bonadio, and gave the same half-hearted salute, stifling snickers, it bothered him. He hated to think that by not being a rigid stickler for military discipline, some of the men might not respect him.
But speaking of sticklers, he turned around to face the officer approaching from the stairs—no the ladder. He had to get used to that. They saluted each other.
“Commander Bainbridge.”
“Commander Rose.”
Commander Montgomery Rose stood at ease, with his hands behind his back, and Doug followed suit. “Since this is your first time back at home port, I thought I’d run through a few things, to make sure all goes smoothly.”
“I appreciate that,” Doug said, not relishing the delay. But he didn’t argue. They were the same rank, and while Doug wasn’t technically part of the crew, Rose commanded the ship to which he was assigned, and so a certain amount of deference was essential even though Doug didn’t take orders from him.
“I know you’ve got your duties to attend to while we’re here,” Rose said, and Doug nodded without elaborating. “I was told your work in port might not bring you back to the ship until we embark again. We’ve got your address and telephone number in the officers’ directory, but we promise to only use them if necessity demands.”
“Thank you,” Doug replied with a nod. He had trouble imagining what would necessitate it—it could only be if the ship were called away early, and he couldn’t think of a reason it would be.
“You may not be aware, but I also maintain an apartment in Shanghai—uptown, near the Recreation Grounds and the Bubbling Well. I rotate shore leave with the officers under my command, and it’s easiest to have a regular address for when I’m not aboard ship.”
That did surprise Doug. “No, I was not aware.” The USS Valparaiso was a new ship, launched in April, and Montgomery Rose had only been part of the Yangtze Patrol since then. He’d said he had a house in Manila, where the Asiatic Fleet was based, and his wife and children lived there. Though the fleet’s Yangtze Patrol Squadron was based out of Shanghai, its ships still rotated in and out of Manila a few times a year.
“Here is the telephone number,” Rose said, handing him a card. “Likewise, only for emergencies.”
“Of course.”
“And, naturally, not to be shared with the enlisted men.”
“Naturally,” Doug said. I’m not an idiot.
Rose stood there for a moment, an odd expression on his face. He’d been stiff and formal with Doug since he’d deployed with them, and Doug imagined that was at least partly because Rose was seven years older, but they held the same rank. At twenty-seven, Doug was young for a commander, and he was pretty sure he was the youngest member of his rank in the Asiatic Fleet. No doubt that had raised a few eyebrows among officers who weren’t familiar with the workings of ONI—the Office of Naval Intelligence.
Doug waited, and arched one eyebrow after a few seconds. Rose acknowledged his questioning look with an awkward smile. “I’m sorry, I don’t quite know what to expect from the next few weeks. Communication wise, that is. This is our first experience having an Intelligence Officer on-board—one of our crew to outward appearances, but not actually.”
Doug understood. His presence on the ship had proven awkward on many occasions over the last six weeks, while they cruised the Yangtze estuary and the coastline of the East China Sea. He was still feeling out his new position himself, and he could hardly expect that Commander Rose had it all figured out.
“Is there something you need to ask?”
“Yes, well—we’re rotating shore leave among the officers, as I said...if we should happen to run into you in town, maybe at a club one night, or having dinner at a restaurant—should we acknowledge that we know you?”
Doug had given this a lot of thought, actually. He’d gotten little direction on the subject from ONI—but one of the big things he’d learned during his two-year immersion in Shanghai was how to appear natural without being secretive.
“I’m not clandestine, if that’s what you’re wondering. I’m going ashore with the men, in my uniform, so my association with the Navy isn’t secret. There are just certain things we don’t discuss in public.”
Rose looked relieved, and Doug thought he detected the commander releasing his breath. “Thank you, Doug. That clears it up nicely. Enjoy your time ashore.”
Rose had only used his given name on a couple of previous occasions, both times in the privacy of his office, and Doug always followed his lead. It still felt awkward. “I’ll see you in a couple of weeks, Monty.”
*
Doug joined the last of the men climbing down to the third sampa
n, which was nearly full. He tossed his shoulder bag to a Petty Officer who offered to catch it, and took his first steps onto the rope ladder, conscious not to show his nervousness at the way it swayed. It wouldn’t do to have the men see him afraid of something they’d gotten very used to.
The sampan pushed away from the USS Valparaiso, and moved slowly toward the point where the south bank of Soochow Creek met the Huang Po River, where a triangular park jutted out from the skyline, one of the few green spaces in downtown Shanghai. As they neared the shore, the slender Chinese operator veered the boat to the left and came up on the end of the northernmost dock on the Bund.
“After you, Commander,” the Petty Officer next to him said. Doug thanked him, climbing onto the wharf and striding toward the Bund. Crowds of people hurried by on the sidewalk, mostly Chinese, but with many westerners and Japanese interspersed; and beyond them cars, trams, and rickshaws jockeyed for position on the wide boulevard with horns, clanging bells, and shouts.
He was about to raise his arm to hail a rickshaw when he saw Lucy hurrying toward him, waving to get his attention. He couldn’t help the big grin that spread across his face.
“My, but you do look handsome in that uniform!” she said as she opened her arms her last few steps. “Oh, I missed you!”
“I missed you too,” he said, holding her tight, then kissing her cheek and stroking the back of her blonde hair. “How did you know I’d be here now?”
“I’ve been waiting in the park all afternoon,” she explained, taking his arm as he hailed a rickshaw. “I knew I’d see the Valparaiso when it approached. The only question was where you’d disembark.”
“Aren’t you clever,” he teased.
Lucy was a high school literature teacher at an American school; it was summer break, and she had no trouble spending an afternoon in a park. A rickshaw stopped, and Doug helped her into the back before climbing in after her. He gave the runner his address in Shanghainese.
“Kenny and Abbie are eager to see you, of course, but I told them I was keeping you to myself tonight. Abbie understood completely. They’re meeting us for lunch tomorrow.”
“Perfect,” Doug said. He was eager to see their best friends, too—but also glad she’d said not tonight. “What did you plan for this evening?”
“I’m cooking dinner,” she said, squeezed his arm a little tighter and laid her head on his shoulder. “I figured you’d appreciate a home-cooked meal after all of those mess hall ones.”
“You’re amazing. Are you sure you’re not psychic? We could set up a storefront for you, and you could sell fortunes.”
She swatted his arm. “Don’t be an ass, you just got here.” Her tone said she was amused, though.
Doug took a deep breath before asking the next thing on his mind. “Have you talked with any of our other friends? Are they still sore with me?”
The pause before she answered spoke volumes. “Funny you should mention that.”
“Yes?”
“I received an invitation just this week, hand-written on Julia’s stationery. They’re hosting an Independence Day party starting on Sunday afternoon at a Park Hotel suite, and including a formal dinner and cocktail party, followed by dancing.”
“Am I included?” Doug asked, his tone a little sharper than he intended.
Her lips tightened, and she gave him a look. “It was addressed to both of us.”
He mumbled an apology.
During his two-year immersion, Doug had posed as a civilian, purportedly working for his father’s import company and running its Shanghai office. He’d made several friends during that time, mostly expatriate Americans, and they’d been a tight-knit group. Even after he’d learned at the beginning of May that his new assignment would be based out of Shanghai—rather than Manila or Honolulu as he’d initially feared—Doug had procrastinated telling his friends until the last opportunity before his ship sailed.
Kenny already knew, of course, and Doug could tell from Abbie’s reaction that Kenny had told her; her surprise seemed a little put on. Pete and George had been downright steamed, though, and even Fred and Stuart were only half-hearted in their congratulations. George’s wife Betty had murmured congratulations while awkwardly glancing at her husband’s bright red scowling face. Pete’s wife Julia had sniffed in a condescending sort of way, one arm crossed over her chest while the other swung her champagne flute.
“The navy, Douglas? My goodness, whatever possessed you to do that?” Her tone had stung, but at least he’d expected something like that from her; what hurt more was the angry reaction from Pete and George. He’d not expected that.
“It’s as if we don’t even know you, Doug,” Pete had said, his lips tight.
The night had ended early—unusual for their crowd, to say the least—and Doug worried for the next six weeks that he’d ruined most of his friendships by secrecy. He reminded himself often that the secrecy had been part of the assignment, but while that assuaged the guilt, it hardly made him feel better about losing his friends.
**
The rickshaw deposited them in front of the grimy brick three-story building on Huang Lei Road in Hongkou, within the North District of the International Settlement. Doug had only his shoulder bag, so after paying the runner a quarter, he took Lucy’s arm and walked up the stairs.
His neighbors’ door was open, but Doug turned toward his own door across the hall, eager to be home. Lucy tugged at his arm, though, and nodded toward Charlie and Bao’s door.
“We should stop and say hello at least,” she said, in that firm way of hers that said she wouldn’t accept any argument. “They’ll be happy to see you.”
She was right, of course. She usually was. Doug allowed her to pull him toward the open door. “Hello?” he called. “Bao? Charlie?”
Li Baosheng emerged from their kitchen, wiping his hands on a ragged dish towel. He was shirtless and barefoot, as usual in the oppressively hot summer months, wearing only a ragged pair of dark blue trousers that were cut off at the knees. His face lit up when he saw them.
“Mr. Bainbridge! You back!” His grin spread from ear to ear as he bowed.
Doug returned the bow, lowering his torso half-way. Lucy followed his lead. “It’s good to be back. I’m glad to see you, Bao. Is Charlie home?”
“He still working. They have a new show starting tonight. He be home in a few hours.”
“Darn, we’ll be at Miss Kinzler’s apartment by then.” Doug felt genuine disappointment.
“No, I’m cooking here tonight,” Lucy corrected.
“Well, then tell Charlie to knock on my door after he gets home.”
Bao bobbed his head. “I will, Mr. Bainbridge.” Then he bowed and returned to the kitchen.
Doug unlocked his door and held it open for Lucy. “Do we need to fetch the food from your place?” he asked as he tossed his bag onto the kitchen table.
“No, I brought it here this morning.” She opened the icebox to show him. A chicken and several vegetables sat on the shelf above a large block of ice.
“You had the ice delivery restarted already. Did you have to pay him yourself?”
“How chivalrous of you, Douglas Bainbridge,” she teased, putting her arms around his neck and standing on her toes to give him a brief kiss on the mouth. “Don’t worry, they let me charge it to your account.”
“You think of everything, don’t you?” he pulled her closer to him and gave her a longer, deeper kiss.
“I’ve been waiting for that,” she murmured when he finally pulled his lips from hers.
“Cooking dinner can wait,” he said with a wink, took her hand, and led her toward his bedroom.
She ran her eyes over his uniform and gave him a salute. “Yes, sir!”
2
Saturday, July 3
“We need to hear all about your adventures while you were away,” Abbie Traywick said after they’d been seated at their usual table by the window at Velardi’s Italian Restaurant; and after barely a min
ute discussing the big news of the day—Amelia Earhart’s disappearance over the Pacific the day before. Her eagerness made Doug smile.
“You know Doug can’t tell us much,” Kenny said, touching her arm.
She waved a hand at her husband. “I’m not asking about anything secret,” she said, as if that had been obvious. “I just want to hear where they went and what he saw. Tell us all about your ship. We got the postcards you sent us, and Lucy told us a few things from your letters, but we don’t know much. Fill us in.”
Doug described the ship’s visits to Nanjing, Nantong, Fuzhou, Hangzhou, and Qingdao; but he left out their near passes of Okinawa and Taipei, during which they stayed just over the line in international waters to observe Japanese maneuvers in and out of their naval bases.
“We’re going to Tsingtao in August,” Kenny said, using the common English pronunciation for Qingdao. “Pete and Julia go there every year for a couple of weeks, and they invited us and George and Betty to join them for a week.”
Doug glanced at Lucy, who gave him the barest of shrugs. Apparently they hadn’t been invited. “You’ll enjoy it. The old German brewery is still operating, and it’s popular with the sailors and other westerners. They have nice beaches, and it isn’t quite as hot as here.”
The waiter took their lunch orders, and as he departed Abbie leaned forward and touched Doug’s forearm. “We’re glad to have you back. It wasn’t the same without you. Lucy was good enough to get us out of the house a few times.”
“You need a break sometimes,” Lucy said, taking a sip of her Chianti. “Now that you aren’t working, you need something to occupy your time besides the baby.”
“Did Lucy tell you we hired an amah a couple of weeks ago?” Abbie asked.
“No, but I’m not surprised,” Doug said. “I don’t think there’s a western family in Shanghai that hasn’t hired one to care for their children. Even middle-class families can afford them here.”
“Changying. She’s been a god-send,” Abbie said. “I don’t know why I waited so long.”
“We can go out on a Saturday night now, eh?” Kenny said. “Speaking of, we should all go dancing tonight. We could start at the Majestic, or maybe the Paramount. End the night at Ciro’s or Roxy’s?”
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