Retreat, Hell! tc-10

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Retreat, Hell! tc-10 Page 46

by W. E. B Griffin


  "A little piece of shrapnel, sir," McCoy replied. "I'm all right."

  "That is not exactly the truth, the whole truth, and nothing but," Picker­ing said as he shook hands with Howe. "Major McCoy is on limited duty. You do understand that, don't you, Major McCoy? Limited?"

  "Yes, sir."

  "Okay. Then let's have some lunch and decide where we go from here."

  Master Sergeant Charley Rogers stood up and went through the swinging door into the kitchen. A moment later, two Korean women came through it carrying china tureens. Rogers followed them into the room.

  "Fish chowder and chicken and dumplings," he said. "If it tastes as good as it smells, we're in luck."

  "So far as I'm concerned in your where-we-go-from-here scenario, Fleming," General Howe said, "Charley and I are on the 1700 courier flight to Tokyo, where I will make my manners to General MacArthur, and then get on a plane—a Trans-Global flight, you should be pleased to learn—for the States."

  "You're really determined to leave me all alone here, are you?"

  "There are a lot of things I have to say to the President that I don't want to put on paper," Howe said. "After I tell him what I think he should hear, and he wants me to come back over here, I will."

  Pickering nodded.

  "I think the first thing on this agenda," Howe said as he smiled thanks for the fish chowder being ladled into his bowl, "should be Colonel Van's new sta­tus, with which he's not entirely delighted. I wanted to make sure he under­stands that while I'm sure you're delighted to have him, his transfer to the CIA—you—was my idea, not yours."

  "I have to tell you, Colonel," Pickering said, "that it makes sense to me, and I feel a little foolish for not having thought of it myself."

  Vandenburg didn't say anything, but it was clear that he had made the de­cision not to say what he was thinking.

  "Let's get it out in the open, Colonel," Pickering said. "What's on your mind?'

  Vandenburg met Pickering's eyes, then shrugged.

  "General, in War Two, when I was asked to join the OSS, I decided I could be of more use where I was, in counterintelligence. I never regretted that deci­sion to stay in the Army. Especially after the war, when the OSS was disbanded and my friends who had gone into the OSS—I'm talking about career officers— went back to the Army. They were treated like lepers, sir."

  McCoy snorted. "Lepers with a social disease?" he asked. " 'Where were you when we were fighting the war?' "

  "Exactly." Vandenburg looked at Pickering and then went on: "Ken told me just about the same thing happened to him when he went back to the Marine Corps."

  "I didn't realize until right now that it was that bad, Ken," Pickering said, and then remembered: "Weren't you offered a chance to go into the CIA?"

  McCoy nodded.

  "Why didn't you?"

  "I was a Marine," McCoy said. "I know what the colonel's talking about. He's a soldier."

  "The same thing happened to me, in 1948, in Greece," Vandenburg went on. "They really wanted me in the CIA there, and I really didn't want to go. And I didn't. And now, all of a sudden, I'm told I'm now in the CIA. This time nobody asked me."

  "Okay, I'm the villain," Howe said. "But don't mistake that for an apology, Colonel. It was my judgment that unless we got you out of the Army, you were about to be co-opted by General Willoughby, and I decided you were too valu­able an asset for General Pickering to lose."

  "General, I wasn't looking for an apology," Vandenburg said. "I'm a soldier— I go where I'm sent. But General Pickering asked what was on my mind."

  "And I'm glad you told me," Howe said. "The President's going to hear about this."

  "General, I wish you wouldn't do that. I'm not whining," Vandenburg said.

  "I didn't think you were, Colonel," Howe said. "But my job is to tell the President what I think he would be interested in hearing. And that's what I'm going to do."

  "Ken," Pickering asked, "did the same sort of thing happen to Ed Banning when the OSS was disestablished?"

  "Sir, Colonel Banning was a regular before the war. He's a Citadel gradu­ate. You know what a fine Marine he is. He was never given command of a battalion, much less a regiment, and he was never promoted above colonel. For that matter, they never used him as an intelligence officer."

  "Then why did he stay in the Marine Corps?" Pickering blurted. "God knows, he doesn't need the money."

  "He's a Marine, General," McCoy said. "He knows it, even if there are a lot of bastards in the Corps who don't want to acknowledge it."

  "That's the end of my contribution to this," General Howe said. "But I'm going to stick around so that I'll be able to tell the President what the new broom is sweeping, and where."

  "I'd like to know what you two," Pickering said, pointing at Vandenburg and McCoy, "think the priorities are. You first, McCoy."

  "Finding out when the Chinese are coming in," McCoy said. "The 1st MarDiv landed at Wonsan yesterday—"

  "Only part of them, McCoy," Howe interrupted. "The 1st Marine Air Wing is ashore and operating out of Wonsan—and Bob Hope and a USO troupe have entertained them there. Even I was there. But there are still elements of the division sailing around in circles waiting for the mines at Wonsan to be cleared. When I saw General Almond—when he told me what had happened to you—he had just had himself flown off the Mount McKinley on a helicopter. I guess by tonight—certainly by tomorrow—everybody should be ashore. The Marines, I mean. They're not going to even try to land the 7th Infantry Divi­sion at Wonsan; they're going to land at Iwon."

  "That's a hundred sixty, seventy miles north of Wonsan," McCoy said. "When's that supposed to happen?"

  "Tomorrow," Howe said.

  "Pyongyang has fallen," McCoy said. "Which means there is no need for X Corps to start back across the peninsula. Which means that pretty soon they'll be ordered to move north instead—"

  "They already have been," Howe interrupted again. He looked at Picker­ing. "I was in Wonsan last night and this morning. I used the L-19." Pickering nodded. "Almond already has his orders. The Capital ROK Division will con­tinue advancing up the coastline toward the Russian border. The ROK 3rd Di­vision is going to go north from Hamhung to the Chosin Reservoir, and then up to the Manchurian border. When the 1st MarDiv gets organized ashore, they will follow the 3rd ROK, and—I don't think the 3rd ROK has been told this—pass through their lines, probably near the reservoir, and beat them to the Manchurian border to make sure our Koreans don't cross it. The 7th Di­vision, once it's ashore at Iwon, will attack north straight for the Manchurian border."

  "I didn't hear any of this in Tokyo," Pickering said, more than a little bitterly.

  "Did you talk to MacArthur?" Howe asked.

  Pickering shook his head no.

  "Almond told me he got his orders via officer courier," Howe went on. "They're probably known only to the Bataan Gang in the Dai Ichi Building, and they wouldn't tell you unless MacArthur specifically ordered them to. . . ."

  "And I didn't ask," Pickering said. "They wouldn't have lied to me if I asked, but I didn't ask."

  "Okay. Well, that's it," Howe said. "That's all I know."

  "Sir, in these circumstances," McCoy said, "our obvious priority is to get as early a warning of the Chinese intervention as possible, especially since no one else thinks it will happen."

  "I think General Almond does," Howe said. "He didn't come right out and say so, but I had the feeling he won't be terribly surprised to encounter the Chi­nese Red Army."

  "How do you propose to get 'as early a warning as possible'?" Pickering asked.

  "Well, that opens a new can of worms," McCoy said.

  "Let's have it," Pickering said.

  "Well, while Colonel Van and I were looking for General Dean and Pick— "

  "One final question about that," Howe interrupted. "What about General Dean? I know the President will ask."

  "I'm afraid all indications are that he's in China, sir," Vandenburg said.

>   "Okay. You did your best, and I'll make sure the President knows that," Howe said. "Go on, McCoy. Sorry for the interruption."

  "When we were looking for the General and Pick, we also trained the men—the Marines we have on loan—as overnight stay-behinds. By that I mean, we dropped them off and went back the next day and got them."

  "Using the Sikorsky helicopters, you mean?" Pickering asked.

  "Yes, sir.”

  "And using—what was the term you used—'overnight stay-behinds'?"

  "That's my term, sir. It's not in any book."

  "Very little of anything you've ever done since I've known you has been in any book," Pickering said.

  "What they do, General," Vandenburg said, "is find someplace where they won't be seen—where nobody would expect them to be—and then they just listen. The last thing they want to do is get in a firefight. There's no way they could win."

  "How do you know where to put them?" Pickering said.

  "We fly over in the daytime in one of the L-19s," McCoy said. "Zimmer­man or I go along in the backseat. We point out to the pilot where we would like to leave them—usually on some hilltop—and the pilot—who will fly the Big Black Bird—decides if he can go in there or not."

  "You're landing helicopters on mountaintops?" Pickering demanded of Major Alex Donald.

  "Most of the time we just hover, sir," Donald said. "A couple of feet off the ground. There's no place to touch the wheels down."

  "You've been making these flights?" Pickering asked.

  "Most of them," McCoy answered for him.

  "And this works?"

  "Not all the time. But it's all we've got," McCoy said.

  "Did you know about this?" Pickering asked Howe.

  Howe shook his head no. "This is not my area of expertise," he said.

  "What did you mean, Ken, when you said 'a new can of worms'?" Picker­ing asked.

  "Well, sir, when we did it north of the line, Zimmerman and I and some of the original Marines from the Flying Fish Channel operation, plus, of course, our Koreans, did it. We never did it with the Marines we borrowed from the 5th Marines."

  "Why not?"

  "Our Marines are volunteers, sir. The guys we borrowed from the 5th Marines didn't volunteer for anything. I don't think we should send people to do something like this if they're not volunteers."

  "Why not?" Howe said. "I don't remember anybody saying 'volunteers take one step forward' when the 5th Marines were ordered to land at Inchon."

  "If our guys are discovered, sir, that's just about it for them. That's not like Inchon. We can't go get them."

  "And you don't think they'd volunteer if they were asked?"

  "I think they probably would, sir, but . . ."

  "But what?"

  "We borrowed them, sir. The 5th Marines expect them back. What do we say if we can't return them? That they're missing on a mission we can't talk about?"

  "Why not?" Howe asked.

  "The Marines don't leave people behind, sir. There would be a lot of ques­tions asked we couldn't answer. But people would keep asking them. Pretty soon, a lot of eyes—angry eyes—would be looking at us, looking damned close at us, and we just can't afford that."

  "There wouldn't be that problem, would there, if the men from the 5th Marines were no longer assigned to the 5th Marines?" Howe asked.

  "What are you thinking, Ralph?" Pickering asked.

  "I think McCoy should go to Socho-Ri, explain what he wants these guys to do, explain why they can only do it if they're in the CIA, ask if anyone wants to be in the CIA, and send the names of those that do to Tokyo. Between you and me, Fleming, with an Operational Immediate message or two, they can be in the CIA by this time tomorrow."

  Pickering happened to glance at Colonel Vandenburg.

  "You've been pretty quiet through all this, Colonel," Pickering said.

  "Sir, no one's said anything I disagree with," Vandenburg said.

  "And you have no suggestion or comment to make?"

  "Yes, sir. I suggest you get on the 1700 courier with General Howe, so you can run this transfer to the CIA business through from Tokyo. McCoy's right— we have to get off the dime. Either do this, if these men volunteer, or think of something else. And right now, I can't think of anything else."

  "That'll teach you to ask questions, Fleming," General Howe said.

  [FIVE]

  Emergency Room

  U.S. Naval Hospital

  San Diego, California

  23O5 27 October 195O

  (15O5 28 October 195O Socho-Ri Local Time)

  "What the hell is this?" Lieutenant Marjorie Wallace, NC, USN, asked of Lieu­tenant (j.g.) James C. Levell, MC, USNR, pointing out the door,

  Lieutenant (j.g.) Levell was the medical officer on duty in the emergency room, and Lieutenant Wallace the nurse in charge. They were in a small glass-walled cubicle savoring a rare moment of respite from their late-evening emer­gency room duties.

  A Packard limousine had stopped outside the emergency room. A civilian couple—a tall, slim, silver-haired woman in her fifties, and a portly, dignified, somewhat jowly man who looked about ten years older—were marching pur­posefully into the emergency room entrance lobby.

  "I've seen him before, somewhere," Lieutenant (j.g.) Levell said, adding, "Let the Corpsman handle it."

  The Corpsman with the responsibility of dealing with whatever came through the emergency room door proved unable to handle it. Ninety seconds later, he came into the glass-walled cubicle where Dr. Levell and Nurse Wal­lace were.

  "Sir," the Corpsman said, "there's a civilian—two civilians . . ."

  "I saw them. What's up?"

  "They want to see whoever's in charge, sir," the Corpsman said.

  "Now what?" Dr. Levell said, stubbed out his cigarette, pushed himself off the desk, and walked out of the glass-walled cubicle.

  He walked up to the couple—I know this guy from somewhere—and smiled at them.

  "May I help you, sir?"

  "We're here to see one of your patients," the man said, and added an ex­planation that was more of an accusation. "There's no one answering the door at the main entrance."

  "Well, sir, the main entrance closes after visiting hours, which are over at nine, I'm afraid."

  "Lieutenant, I think the best way to get this over with quickly would be for you to get the hospital commander on the line."

  "I'm not sure I follow you, sir," Dr. Levell said, "but I'd like to suggest that you come back at nine tomorrow morning, when visiting hours begin. There's just no way—"

  "Get the hospital commander on the phone, Lieutenant," the man said. "Tell him Senator Fowler is in his emergency room."

  Oh, Jesus. That's who it is! Richardson K. Fowler in the goddamn flesh! I knew I knew that face!

  "Senator, will you come with me, please? We'll see if we can get the hospi­tal commander on the phone for you."

  "Thank you very much," Senator Fowler said.

  "Senator," Captain W. Ainsley Unger, Jr., MC, USN, said five minutes later, "there's obviously been a communications foul-up somewhere. If I had known you were coming . . ."

  "Captain—or do I call you 'Doctor'?"

  "Either's fine, Senator."

  "This is Mrs. Patricia—Mrs. Fleming—Pickering. Her son, Major Mal­colm S. Pickering, Marine Reserves, was flown in here last night from Japan. We want to see him."

  "Well, Senator, visiting hours—"

  "Are over. The young doctor made that clear. Let me put it this way: Mrs. Pickering is determined to see her son, who spent most of the last three months evading capture in Korea, and I am determined that she shall. Now, can you arrange this for us, or should I get on the telephone to the Secretary of the Navy?"

  "I'm sure an exception can be made," Captain Unger said. "Do you hap­pen to know where in the hospital your son is, Mrs. Pickering?"

  "Room 16," Patricia Fleming said, "NP Ward."

  The effect of that announcement was evident on
Dr. Unger's face.

  "I suspect NP stands for Neuro-Psychiatric," Patricia Fleming said. "Does it?"

  "Yes, ma'am, it does. And that may complicate things, as you can well understand."

  "I want to see my son," Patricia Fleming said flatly.

  "May I make a suggestion, Mrs. Pickering?" Dr. Unger said.

  "Of course."

  "I think it would be best if you had a word with his attending physician be­fore you see him."

  "That makes sense, Patty," Senator Fowler said.

  "Okay," Patricia Fleming said, "as long as I have the word with him now, tonight."

  "Yes, of course," Dr. Unger said.

  Lieutenant Patrick McGrory, MC, USN, looked a little flushed when he came into Captain Unger's office. Senator Fowler wondered if he was flushed because he had run or trotted in response to the captain's call, or whether, perhaps, the young Navy doctor had had a belt or two.

  Dr. McGrory immediately put the question to rest.

  "I was in the Officers' Club, sir," he said to Captain Unger. "I didn't expect to be called upon to discuss Major Pickering tonight."

  "You're not drunk, certainly." j

  "Well, I wouldn't want to drive, sir, but I'm not drunk."

  "Doctor, you probably recognize Senator Fowler," Captain Unger said.

  "Yes, sir, indeed I do," McGrory said with a smile, putting out his hand. "I even voted for you, Senator, thereby enraging my staunchly Democrat family."

  Fowler beamed.

  "How do you do, Doctor?" Fowler said. "I have myself been known to take a little nip at the end of a hard day."

  "You've a connection with Major Pickering, Senator?"

  "I'm his godfather," Fowler said. "And this is his mother, Mrs. Patricia Pick­ering, who has herself been known to take a little nip after duty hours." He paused and looked at Captain Unger. "I mention that, Captain, to make the point that neither Mrs. Pickering nor I are in any way offended because Dr. Mc­Grory has had a drink or two."

  "I'm glad you understand," Unger said. "And I know how hard Dr. Mc­Grory works."

  "Let's talk about my son," Patricia Pickering said.

  "Okay," McGrory said. "He's a hard-nose. I'm pleased to see that it's prob­ably genetic, rather than a symptom of his condition."

 

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