W E B Griffin - Corp 09 - Under Fire
Page 9
ON ARRIVAL AT CAMP PENDLETON CAPT MC-COY SHOULD BE COUNSELED BY AN OFFICER OF EQUAL OR SUPERIOR RANK MAKING CLEAR TO HIM THE FOLLOWING:
HQ USMC DOES NOT WISH TO ENTERTAIN ANY REQUEST FOR RECONSIDERATON OF HIS RE-LEASE FROM ACTIVE DUTY AS A COMMISSIONED OFFICER. HE WILL BE SEPARATED FROM THE USMC NOT LATER THAN 30 JUNE 1950.
IT IS THE INTENTION OF THE G-l SECTION USMC TO DETERMINE AT WHICH ENLISTED GRADE CAPT MCCOY MAY ELECT TO ENLIST ON SEPARATION AT THE EARLIEST POSSIBLE TIME. SUCH DETERMINATION WILL BE FUR-NISHED BY TELETYPE MESSAGE TO G-l CAMP PENDLETON, AND IT IS ANTICIPATED THIS WILL OCCUR BEFORE 30 JUNE. ON RECEIPT OF ENLISTMENT OPTION, CAPT MCCOY WILL BE OFFERED THE OPTION OF IMMEDIATE RE-LEASE FROM ACTIVE DUTY FOR THE PURPOSE OF ENLISTING IN THE USMC; OR OF IMMEDI-ATELY BEING SEPARATED FROM THE NAVAL SERVICE TO ENTER CIVILIAN LIFE. SHOULD CAPT MCCOY ELECT TO DO SO HE MAY REMAIN ON ACTIVE DUTY UNTIL 30 JUNE 1950.
CAPT MCCOY HAS TWENTY-NINE (29) DAYS OF ACCRUED LEAVE. HE SHOULD BE OFFERED THE OPPORTUNITY TO GO ON LEAVE STATUS IF HE SO DESIRES UNTIL HE ACCEPTS OR DECLINES REENLISTMENT IN THE GRADE TO BE OF-FERED, OR UNTIL 28 JUNE 1950 WHEN AB-SENT PRIOR SEPARATION AS OUTLINED ABOVE HIS SEPARATION PROCESS MUST COMMENCE.
FOR THE COMMANDANT:
ROSCOE L. QUINCY LT COL USMC
ASST CHIEF OFFICER PERSONNEL OFFICE OF THE ASSISTANT CHIEF OF STAFF, G-l
HQ USMC
ROUTINE
Major Macklin puffed thoughtfully on his pipe as he considered the message, then read it again to fix the details in his mind.
Although this was not mirrored on his face, Major Macklin had an emotional reaction to the message. He was surprised at its intensity.
At 0735, five minutes after Lieutenant Colonel Peter S. Brewer, USMC-a short, muscular, thirty-seven-year-old-who was Chief of Officer Records and Major Macklin's immediate superior, had entered his office, he saw Major Macklin in the open door of the office, waiting for permission to enter.
He waved him in.
"Good morning, Macklin," Lieutenant Colonel Brewer said. "Something?"
"Good morning, sir," Macklin replied. "I wondered if the colonel had seen this?"
He handed Brewer the TWX from Eighth & Eye.
Brewer read it, then looked up at Macklin to see what he had tp say about it.
"The phrase about encouraging this officer to take leave before he's separated, sir."
"What about it?"
"Sir, I'd like to find something for this officer to do around here, so that he wouldn't have to take leave."
"Why?"
"Sir, I know this officer. May I speak frankly?"
Lieutenant Colonel Brewer made a "come-on" gesture with his left hand.
"Sir, McCoy was commissioned when the Corps really needed officers. And, frankly, he was one of those who never should have been commissioned."
"Why not?"
"Well, sir, he lacks the education to be an officer, and... this is difficult to put in words. He doesn't really under-stand the unwritten rules on which an officer has to pattern his life. He's not an officer and a gentleman, sir, if you take my meaning."
"Where are you going with this, Macklin?" Lieutenant Colonel Brewer asked.
"I know McCoy well enough to know he's living from payday to payday," Macklin said. "You know the type, sir. Not a thought for tomorrow..."
"Okay, so what?"
"My thought, sir, is that if McCoy doesn't take leave, he'll be paid for it when he's separated. Whether he leaves the Corps or reenlists, I'm sure that he'd like to have-is really going to need-a month's pay in cash."
Lieutenant Colonel Brewer considered that a moment, first thinking that it was really nice of Macklin to take an interest like this-he didn't seem the type-and then con-sidering what he was asking for.
The Eighth & Eye TWX had said McCoy "should be of-fered the opportunity" to take leave; it didn't make it an or-der.
"Sure," Lieutenant Colonel Brewer said. "Why not? Have him inventory supply rooms or something. There's always a need for someone to do that."
"And, sir, with your permission, I'd rather not have him get the idea we're doing this out of-what... pity, I sup-pose, is the word."
Brewer considered that for a moment.
"Handle it any way you think is best, Macklin."
"Yes, sir. Thank you, sir. With your permission, sir?"
Lieutenant Colonel Brewer gave Major Macklin permis-sion to withdraw with a wave of his hand.
Major Macklin returned to his office quite pleased with himself.
"Killer" McCoy getting himself booted out of the Corps was really no surprise. The miserable little sono-fabitch should never have been a commissioned officer in the first place. I'm only surprised that he lasted as long as he did.
Having him assigned here, under my command, for his last twenty-nine days as an officer is really poetic justice. I owe him.
An officer and a gentleman would never have done to a brother officer what that lowlife sonofabitch did to me. And got away with.
Until now.
The next twenty-nine days are mine.
It's payback time.
As he sat behind his desk, he had another thought that pleased him even more:
If he does accept whatever stripes Eighth & Eye de-cides he's worth, and enlists-and how else can he earn a living?-maybe I could arrange to have him stationed here.
"Reduced to the ranks"? I'd like to see the sonofabitch busted down to PFC.
And with a little luck, I might be able to do just that.
[TWO]
THROUGH WITH ENGINES
NEAR CARMEL-BY-THE-SEA, CALIFORNIA
0905 7 JUNE 1950
As Trans-Global Airways' Flight 637, Luxury Service Be-tween Tokyo and San Francisco, began the last (Hon-olulu-San Francisco) leg of the flight, Fleming Pickering had taken advantage of Ken McCoy's visit to the rest room and had brought up the subject of Through with Engines to Ernie Sage McCoy.
Through with Engines was the more-or-less 110-acre Pickering estate near Carmel. On it was a large, rambling, but not pretentious single-floor house, designed to provide as many of its rooms as possible with the best possible view of the Pacific Ocean; a boathouse; a small airplane hangar; a small cottage for the servants; and a shedlike building used to house the grass-cutting-and other es-tate-machinery and a garage. None of the buildings-or the Pacific Ocean-could be seen from the road.
The land, which at the time had held only what was now the servants' cottage, and the boathouse had been the wed-ding gift of Andrew Foster to Patricia, his only daughter, on her marriage to Fleming Pickering. The house-actually the first four rooms thereof; eight more having been added, often one at a time, over the years-had been the gift of Commodore Pickering to his son Fleming on the occasion of his successful passage of the U.S. Coast Guard examina-tions leading to his licensing as an Any Ocean, Any Ton-nage Master Mariner, his right to call himself "Captain," and his first command of a Pacific & Far East vessel.
It was originally used by the young couple as somewhere they could go for privacy when he returned from a voyage, and Patricia had almost immediately pointed out that, since there were no street numbers, and nothing could be seen from the highway, the place needed a name. And it also needed signs to inform the public that it was private property.
Patricia Foster Pickering had thought her husband's sug-gestion of "Through with Engines"-the last signal sent from the bridge to the engine room at the conclusion of a voyage-was rather sweet, and told him she'd see about having a sign made.
"You'll need a lot more than one sign," he had replied. "I'll take care of it."
She thought that was sweet, too, until, on her next visit to what she thought of as "the beach place," she found the road lined at 100-yard intervals with four-by-eight-foot sheets of plywood signs, painted yellow, red, and black, reading:
PRIVATE PROPERTY
THROUGH WITH ENGINES
NO TRESPASSING UNDER
PENALTY OF LAW
They had come from the p
ainting shop of the P&FE maintenance yard, and consequently were of the highest quality, and designed to resist the ravages of storms at sea.
It had taken Patricia most of Pick Pickering's life to get rid of the signs and replace them with something a little more attractive-and a little less belligerent. One original sign survived, and was now mounted on the wall of what she thought of as "the playroom," and her husband referred to as the "big bar," there being another-the "little bar"-by the swimming pool.
"Honey," Fleming Pickering said to Ernie McCoy, "I just had a great idea. Why don't you stay at Through with Engines while Ken's at Camp Pendleton?"
She smiled at him, but there was an I know what you`re up to look in her eyes.
What the hell, when in doubt, tell the truth.
"It won't be much fun for you down there, Ernie," he said. "And Patricia-if she's not already back-will want to see you."
And want to talk to you, especially after I tell her about Ken being reduced to the ranks. It's absolutely true that she thinks of you as a daughter. And talking to Patricia would certainly be a very good thing for you.
"I go where Ken goes," Ernie said. "But thanks, Uncle Flem."
"Have you considered that he might want you to stay at Through with Engines?"
"Pick said that, when he offered us Through with En-gines," Ernie said. "Your minds run in similar paths." She paused, then repeated, "I go where Ken goes."
"Okay."
"Pick's going to fly us down there in his airplane," she said. "We're going from the airport to Through with Engines, spend the night, fly down to San Diego-North Island Naval Air Station-in the morning. Pick will then run the girls out of his suite in the Coronado Beach, and turn it over to us."
"I didn't know," Pickering said.
"That way, I'll have a little time with Aunt Pat," Ernie went on. "The Pickerings are taking good care of the Mc-Coys, Uncle Flem, and the McCoys really appreciate it."
"Ernie, I don't know how much good I'll be able to do Ken," Pickering said.
"I know you'll do what you can," she said, and then Ken had appeared in the aisle and he changed the subject.
Pick's airplane was a Staggerwing Beechcraft, so called because the upper wing of the single-engine biplane was mounted farther aft than the lower. It was painted bright yellow, and there was a legend painted in script on the en-gine nacelle, "Once Is Enough."
"I'll bite," Ernie McCoy said, pointing to the legend af-ter her husband and Pick Pickering had rolled the aircraft from the hangar behind the main house of Through with Engines. "Once what is enough?"
"Once under the Golden Gate Bridge," Ken McCoy said, smiling at her.
"Mom's father gave me the Beech when I came home from the Pacific," Pick said. "It used to be Foster Hotel's. Now they have an R4D. Together with a long `once is enough' speech. So I had it painted on the nacelle."
"Once what is enough?" Ernie said.
"I told you, baby," McCoy said, smiling at her. "Once under the Golden Gate Bridge."
"He flew this under the Golden Gate Bridge?" Ernie asked, incredulously.
"With poor George Hart with him," McCoy said, chuck-ling at the memory.
"At the time it seemed like a splendid idea," Pick said.
"George had just gone to work for the Boss," McCoy said. "Colonel Rickabee decided the Boss needed a body-guard, so I went to Parris Island and found George in boot camp. He'd been a detective in Saint Louis...."
"Still is," Pick said. "I saw him there a couple of months ago. He's twice a captain, once in the cops, and once in the Corps Reserve. He's got an infantry company."
"I didn't know that," McCoy said. "Anyway, one day George is a boot, and the next day he's a sergeant bodyguard protecting the Boss, and the day after that, the Boss col-lapses-malaria and exhaustion; that was right after he was hit on the tin can leaving Guadalcanal, and they made him a Brigadier-in the suite in the Foster Lafayette in Washing-ton and winds up in the hospital. Rickabee sends George out here to tell the lunatic here that his father's going to be all right, and the lunatic here loads him in this-which he stole from his grandfather for the occasion, by the way-and flies under the Golden Gate. George told me he prayed to be able to go back to the safety of boot camp on Parris Island."
"Hart was with your dad all through the war, wasn't he?" Ernie asked.
"All the way, right to the end. He was even on the plane when the Old Man went into Japan before the surrender," Pick said. "Good man, George."
"And you got away with it?" Ernie asked. "You flew un-der the bridge, and got away with it?"
"I was a newly rated Marine aviator," Pick said. "With probably two hundred hours' total time, and therefore con-vinced I could fly anything anywhere..."
"By the skin of his teeth," McCoy said, "and with the considerable assistance of Senator Fowler."
"I don't like the look in your eyes, Pick," Ernie said. "Nothing smart-ass with the airplane today, Okay?"
"Nothing could possibly be further from my mind," Pick said, smiling wickedly.
"She means it, Pick," McCoy said. "Nothing cute with the airplane."
Pick looked at McCoy, surprised at his seriousness.
"Ernie's pregnant," McCoy said. "This is the fourth time; the first three didn't-"
"Jesus H. Christ!" Pick said. "Jesus, Ernie, you didn't say anything...."
"The first time, I told everybody, and everybody was re-ally sympathetic when I miscarried," Ernie said. "Like it says, `once is enough.'"
"You're the only one who knows," McCoy said. "Don't make us sorry we told you."
Pick looked between the two of them for a moment.
"Would congratulations be in order?"
"Nice thought," Ernie said. "But a little premature. Wait six months, and have another shot at it."
[THREE]
NORTH ISLAND NAVAL AIR STATION
SAN DIEGO, CALIFORNIA
1400 8 JUNE 1950
"North Island," Pick Pickering said into his microphone. "Beech Two Oh Two."
Pick was wearing a flamboyantly flowered Hawaiian shirt, yellow slacks, and loafers without socks.
Ernie McCoy was sitting beside him, wearing a dress. Pick had refused, considering her delicate condition, to let her defer to the rule that men sat in the front of a vehicle- wheeled or winged-and women in the back. McCoy, wearing his uniform, was in the back with the luggage that wouldn't fit in the baggage compartment.
"Civilian aircraft calling North Island. Go ahead."
Ernie could hear the conversation over her headset.
"North Island, this is Beech Two Oh Two, VFR at 4,500 over the beautiful blue drink, about ten miles north of your station, request approach and landing, please."
"Beach Two Oh Two, North Island is a Navy field, closed to civilian traffic. Suggest you contact Lindbergh Field on 214.6."
"North, Two Oh Two, suggest you contact whoever has the exception to the rules book, and then give me approach and landing."
"Hold One, Two Oh Two."
There was a sixty-second pause.
`Two Oh Two, North."
"Go ahead."
"North clears Beech Two Oh Two to descend to 2,500 feet for an approach to Runway One Eight. Report when you have the field in sight."
"Roger. Understand 2,500, Runway One Eight. Begin-ning descent at this time."
"Aircraft in the North pattern, be advised that a civilian single Beech biplane will be in the landing pattern."
"North, Two Oh Two, at 2,500, course one eight zero, I have the runway in sight."
`Two Oh Two, North. You are cleared as number one for a straight-in approach and landing on Runway One Eight. Be advised that high-performance piston-and-jet aircraft are operating in the area."
"North, Two Oh Two, understand Number One to One Eight. I am over the outer marker."
"Two Oh Two, North. Be advised that Lieutenant Colonel Dunn will meet your aircraft at Base Ops."
"Thank you, North."
There was no hea
dset in the back of the Staggerwing, and McCoy had not heard the conversation between the North Island control tower and Pick Pickering. And because he was in the rear of the fuselage, when the airplane stopped and he heard the engine dying, he reached over, unlatched the door, and backed out of the airplane. When his feet touched the ground, he turned around and was more than a little startled to see a light colonel standing there wearing the gold wings of a Naval aviator, a chest full of fruit salad, and a displeased look on his face that, combined with the fact he had his hands on his hips, suggested he was dis-pleased with something.