The Sharp End

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The Sharp End Page 31

by Phil Ward


  A Ferris wheel ride at an amusement park is a cheap thrill. Being swung out over the Mediterranean in the dark of night, then lowered down the side of a ship in a two-and-a-half-ton amphibious truck and plopped in the sea behind enemy lines—that’s a real thrill.

  Not to worry. Skipper Finley’s crew had trained to perform the drill until they could do it in their sleep. The DUKW splashed down as light as a rubber ducky in a bathtub.

  Frank cranked up the engine and headed for shore. Skipper Finley immediately got the trawler underway, headed up the coast to drop off Captain “Geronimo” Joe McKoy and the remaining men of Duck Patrol.

  The gun DUKW was on its own, sailing on a private enterprise. Capt. Kidd liked it that way. He was comfortable operating behind the lines. However, tonight was a first—Raiding Forces had never sent a lone vehicle on a mission all by itself.

  Capt. Kidd was going to raid the remote hotel BOMBSHELL target that Air Intelligence had identified as a Luftwaffe hostel. The Nazis had requisitioned it for pilots to stay in while they were operating from the desert airstrips in the immediate area –flying mostly against Tobruk. Then the gun truck was to make its way overland to Oasis X.

  Some people might consider their assignment a suicide mission. No one on the DUKW thought so. Raiding Forces did not do suicide missions.

  • • •

  Acting Provisional Sub-Lieutenant Skipper Warthog Finley made way as soon

  as the DUKW was clear of the trawler. The plan was for him to sail up the coastline well out to sea and drop off Duck Patrol. The second mission was more complicated for the sailors from the purely technical standpoint of seamanship. The crew would have to launch four DUKWs with gun jeeps in the back and one DUKW with a crane mounted.

  The five DUKWs would make their way ashore. The crane DUKW was along to unload all four gun jeeps. Then all five DUKWs would motor back to the trawler and be retrieved by its crane.

  Then Skipper Finley would make a mad dash back in the direction of Alexandria at full speed to reach the safety of the RAF air umbrella before daybreak. By any measure of seamanship, it was a tall order.

  Captain “Geronimo” Joe McKoy and Waldo Treywick were sitting in the gun jeep in the bed of the first DUKW launched over the side by the deck crane. The RNPS coxswain circled while the other four amphibious trucks were lowered into the water. Capt. McKoy was anxious to get going, but the unloading operation could not be hurried.

  Duck Patrol had to land on a deserted beach, unload the four gun jeeps from the DUKWs, and then drive inland approximately five miles to the grid coordinates where Brandy Seaborn believed the 621st Radio Intercept Company was set up—the idea being to find, fix and finish the Desert Fox’s crystal ball reader.

  If the SOLID GOLD target was there, Capt. McKoy’s Phantom operator was to signal Colonel John Randal (who would be airborne en route to their location) the mission was a green light. Team A would drop in and kill or capture Captain Alfred Seebohm with Duck Patrol in support.

  There was nothing simple about this plan.

  Finally, all four DUKWs were successfully launched, bobbing and weaving their way toward the beach. They made it to shore undetected, and the process of unloading the gun jeeps began immediately.

  When the last gun jeep was on the ground, Capt. McKoy drove inland while the DUKWs went back into the water to return to the trawler. It did not take long for Duck Patrol to travel four of the five miles to the objective.

  Waldo dismounted and with one of the Rangers backing him up, disappeared into the dark. As they moved out, the ex-ivory poacher said, “Sonny boy, you better be silent as a ghost.”

  “Don’t worry—I’m from Kentucky, Mr. Treywick,” the Ranger whispered back. “Grew up in the hills hiding out from revenuers sneaking around looking for my granddaddy’s still—ain’t nobody gonna hear me I don’t want ’em to.”

  The two quickly traveled across the desert to where the target was reported to be—and there it was. A single tent. Seebohm’s HQ—the SOLID GOLD target would be somewhere behind it in the distance.

  When the recon party returned to Duck Patrol, Waldo said, “Right on the money Joe—SOLID GOLD.”

  Capt. McKoy ordered the Phantom operator, “Contact Colonel Randal—target in sight.”

  The plan was for Duck Patrol, with Col. Randal’s Team A onboard, to advance to within a mile of the tent Waldo had located. A small party armed with silenced weapons would advance on the target and take it out as quietly as possible.

  Then Duck Patrol, with Team A on board, would come on line and drive in the direction where they hoped Seebohm’s HQ tent would be located. When they found it, the Raiders would engage with every weapon the patrol had.

  It was not much of a plan.

  Waldo got behind the wheel of Capt. McKoy’s command jeep and slowly drove in the direction of the 621st Radio Intercept Company. He was going to keep it under observation until Team A arrived.

  Capt. McKoy climbed in the passenger seat on another jeep and led the three remaining Duck Patrol gun jeeps two miles west to a likely spot and stood by to set up a DZ for Team A.

  After what seemed like a lifetime, but which was in fact less than thirty minutes, the Phantom operator said, “Five minutes out.”

  Capt. McKoy pitched out a red railroad flare. The other two jeeps did the same.

  Up in the Hudson, piloted by Lieutenant Pamala-Plum Martin, Col. Randal was arched out the door looking for the Initial Point (IP) when he saw the three flares on the ground.

  The Vargas Girl-looking Royal Marine pilot saw them too. She was in high spirits. Captain Roy Kidd had radioed “BOMBSHELL MISSION ACCOMPLISHED.”

  Col. Randal swung back inside and shouted at his stick, “CLOSE ON THE DOOR.”

  Then he turned back to the door, put the toe of his right canvas-topped raiding boot halfway over the edge of nothingness. Knees bent in a crouch, he reached out and slapped his hands, palm down, outside on the skin of the Hudson on both sides of the door.

  Col. Randal was not doing all that great. The pain from his first jump earlier had started to kick in. And he was beginning to feel fairly stiff. Fortunately, this jump was going to be at eight hundred feet, which should result in a much softer landing.

  When the flare was just off the toe of his boot, Col. Randal shouted, “GO.”

  He jumped as hard as he could, but somehow got it wrong. In his mind he was counting “One thousand, two thousand, three thousand . . .” the way Airborne Command taught at Ft. Benning. The parachute was supposed to be open by “four thousand.”

  When that happened, the jumper was supposed grab the risers and look up to “CHECK CANOPY” to make sure it had deployed properly and that there were no blown panels. British paratroopers did not do that. Since they did not jump reserves, there was not much they could do in the event their chute had malfunctioned.

  When Col. Randal reached “four thousand,” nothing had happened. He looked up and saw that the X-type parachute had not deployed. It was a streamer—what U.S. Paratroopers called a Roman Candle.

  Col. Randal immediately began the drill. He leaned back, reached down, grabbed the handle of his reserve parachute, yanked it as hard as possible and thought he had ripped it completely off when the handle tore free in his hand—not a reassuring feeling. Again, nothing happened!

  Then Col. Randal remembered he had to deploy the reserve chute by hand, which he started doing as fast as he could. The white silk canopy spilled out and blew back against his legs. This was officially not good.

  He reached down, grabbed the silk parachute, gathered it up and tossed it out away from his body. The wind caught the canopy and the reserve popped open. When that happened, the main chute deployed too. Now Col. Randal was coming down under two parachutes, but by this time he was extremely low to the ground.

  With two chutes pulling in different directions there was no way to attempt a parachute landing fall. He crashed flat on his back. WHAAAM!

  On this jump he d
id not hit a single one of the five points of contact. Col. Randal did not immediately jump up and dust himself off in the approved Airborne manner. He was in a lot of pain.

  Both parachutes drifted down and covered him like a shroud. He was not having a good night.

  Captain Billy Jack Jaxx ran over.

  “You OK, Colonel?” Capt. Jaxx asked as Col. Randal struggled to his feet and hit the quick release, dropping his harness.

  “Just swell,” Col. Randal said, through gritted teeth.

  “You’re supposed to drop the handle after popping your reserve, sir.” Capt. Jaxx said, noting that the Colonel was still holding his.

  “Not a chance, Jack,” Col. Randal said. “I pulled this one so hard it’s got my finger grooves bent in it.”

  “Sir,” Capt. Jaxx said, “reserve handles are made out of solid steel.”

  Col. Randal said, “Yeah.”

  26

  PAIN

  Colonel John Randal was sitting on the steps in the shallow end of the private pool of the suite he shared with Major the Lady Jane Seaborn—back from the desert. It was an hour before sunrise. He was hoping soaking in the water would make some of the pain go away. It would be fair to say his morale was low.

  When Duck Patrol linked up with Waldo immediately after Team A jumped in, he reported the 621st Radio Intercept Company was gone. The Germans had struck the tent he had under observation, loaded it on a truck and driven off in the dark.

  No SOLID GOLD.

  Duck Patrol set off across the desert to raid targets of opportunity on their way back to Oasis X. The Rangers went with Captain “Geronimo” Joe McKoy to acquire actual patrolling experience. They would be dropped off to link up with the rest of the Five-Seven-Five later to continue their training.

  Col. Randal, James “Baldie” Taylor, Captain Billy Jack Jaxx and King had been picked up by Lieutenant Pamala Plum-Martin and flown back to RFHQ in the Hudson. Except for the report of the successful BOMBSHELL mission, it had been a long, frustrating night.

  Lady Jane came out and slipped into the pool beside him. Golden tan, her mahogany hair swept back—drop-dead gorgeous. She put her arm around his shoulder with her scarlet nails splayed on his chest. That felt good.

  “Do you know how Prime Minister Churchill defines success, John?” Lady Jane asked.

  “I have no idea.”

  “He said it is ‘going from failure to failure with no loss of enthusiasm.’”

  Col. Randal said, “Well, that would be us.”

  Lady Jane said, “I inherited my title at birth. It set me apart from the other children. My family was so enormously wealthy and famous I was like a little twig trying to grow up under the shadow of a giant oak tree. Until the night you appeared, my life was spent trying to conform to what others expected of me.

  “You allow me to be myself,” Lady Jane said. “I love you, John.”

  She kissed him on the cheek.

  Col. Randal wondered if Lady Jane was the Nazi spy.

  ____________

  To be continued in Raiding Rommel – book XI in the Raiding Forces Series

  THE RAIDING FORCES SERIES CONTINUES…ALL THE WAY TO VE DAY.

  ____________

  To be on our notification list for the next book, contact [email protected].

  ABBREVIATIONS

  ORDERS & AWARDS

  Bt – Baronet

  CB – Companion of the Bath

  CMG – Companion of the Order of St. Michael & St. George

  DCM – Distinguished Conduct Medal

  DFC – Distinguished Flying Cross (Royal Air Force)

  DSC – Distinguished Service Cross (Royal Navy)

  DSO – Distinguished Service Order

  GC – George Cross

  GCB – Grand Cross in the Order of the Bath

  GM – George Medal

  KBE – Knight Commandeer of the British Empire

  KCVO – Knight Commander of the Royal Victorian Order

  LG – Lady Companion of the Order of the Garter

  MC – Military Cross

  MM – Military Medal

  MVO – Member of the Royal Victorian Order

  OBE – Order of the Empire

  VC – Victoria Cross

  THE SHARP END

  ACRONYMS

  AO – Area of Operation

  AP – Armor Piercing

  AT – Anti Tank

  AVG – American Volunteer Group

  BAR – Browning Automatic Rifle

  BDU – Battle Dress Uniform

  BOAC – British Overseas Airways Corporation

  CO – Commanding Officer

  COW – Coventry Ordnance Works

  CP – Command Post

  DUKW – A two and a half ton swimming tank

  DZ – Drop Zone

  GHQME/ GHQ – General Headquarters Middle

  HE – High Explosive

  HUMIT – Human Intelligence

  I&R – Intelligence & Reconnaissance (Platoon)

  IP – Initial Point

  ISSB – Inner Services Security Board

  KRRC – King’s Royal Rifle Corps

  LCT – Landing Craft Tank

  LMG – Light Machine Gun

  LRDG – Long Range Desert Group

  LUP – Laying Up Position

  MG – Machine Gun

  NID – Naval Intelligence Division

  OKW – Oberkommando der Wehrmacht

  OP – Operations (Orders)

  PBI – Poor Bloody Infantry

  PIR – Parachute Infantry Regiment

  PWE – Political Warfare Executive

  RAF – Royal Air Force

  RFHQ – Raiding Forces Headquarters

  RM – Royal Marine

  RN – Royal Navy

  RNVR – Royal Navy Volunteer Reserve

  RNPS – Royal Navy Patrol Service

  SDF – Sudan Defense Force

  SIGNIT – Signals Intelligence

  SIME – Security Intelligence Middle East Command

  SIS – Secret Intelligence Service

  SOE – Special Operations Executive

  TO&E – Table of Organization and Equipment

  USN – United States Navy

  THE SHARP END

  LIST OF CHARACTERS

  Acting Provisional Sub-Lt. Skipper “Mud Cat” Ray, OBE, RNPS

  Acting Provisional Sub-Lt. Skipper Warthog Finley, OBE, RNPS

  Brandy Seaborn, GC

  Brig. Raymond J. “R.J.” Maunsell

  Brig. Stewart Menzies, DSO, aka “C”

  Capt. Reacher

  Capt. “Geronimo” Joe McKoy, OBE

  Capt. “Pyro” Percy Stirling, DSO, MC

  Capt. Billy Jack Jaxx, MC, SSM

  Capt. David Stirling

  Capt. Duke Slater

  Capt. Hawthorne Merryweather

  Capt. Malcom Chatterhorn

  Capt. Penelope “Legs” Honeycutt-Parker, OBE, GM RM

  Capt. Peter Fleming

  Capt. Roy Kidd, MC

  Capt. Roy “Mad Dog” Reupart

  Capt. Teasdale Brown-Brown

  Col. Bonner Fellers

  Col. Dudley Clarke

  Col. John Randal, DSO, OBE, DSC, MC

  Cpl. Pettigrew

  CWO Hank W. Rawlston

  Ens. Teddy Hamilton, OBE aka “The Great Teddy”

  Flanigan

  FM Claude Auchinleck

  FM Erwin Rommel

  FM Sir Archibald Wavell

  Frank Polanski

  Gen. Douglas McArthur

  Guns

  His Royal Majesty King George VI

  James B. McGovern, aka “Earthquake McGoon”

  King

  Lana Turner

  Lovat Scout Lionel Fenwick

  Lovat Scout Munro Ferguson

  Lt. Jackson

  Lt. “Dynamite” Dick Coogan

  Lt. Alexandra (Mandy) Paige, OBE, RM

  Lt. Butch “Headhunter” Hoolihan, DSO, MC, MM, RM

 
Lt. Clint Hays

  Lt. Dan Morgan

  Lt. Karen Montgomery, RM

  Lt. Pamala Plum-Martin, DSO, OBE, DFC, RM

  Lt. Randy “Hornblower” Seaborn, OBE, DSC, RN

  Lt. Cdr. Ian Fleming, RNVR

  Lt. Col. Randolph Johnson

  Lt. Col. Valentine Killery

  Maj. Mattesion

  Maj. A.W. "Sammy" Sansom

  Maj. Clive Adair

  Maj. Edward Twitterington aka “Twitters the Taster”

  Maj. Everard Beauchamp

  Maj. Jack Black

  Maj. Jack Merritt, DSO, MC, MM

  Maj. Jeb Pelham-Davies, DSO, MC

  Maj. Sir Terry “Zorro” Stone, KBE, DSO, MC

  Maj. Taylor Corrigan, DSO, MC

  Maj. The Lady Jane Seaborn, LG, OBE, RM

  Maj. Travis McCloud

  Maj. Gen. James “Baldie” Taylor, OBE

  Masterson

  McQueen

  Mo

  Mr. Jones

  Mr. Smith

  Pvt. Komansky

  Rikke (Rocky) Runborg

  Rita Hayworth

  Sgt. Frank Hawkins, MM

  Sgt. Ned Pompedous

  Sgt. Rex Blackburn

  Sgt. Tim Authury, MM

  Sgt. Maj. Mike “March or Die” Mikkalis, DSM, MM

  Skipper Mike “Wino” Muldoon, OBE

  Sqn. Ldr. Paddy Wilcox, DSO, OBE, MC, DFC

  VAdm. Sir Randolph “Razor” Ransom, VC, KCB, DSO, OBE, DSC

  Veronica Paige, OBE

  Wg. Cdr. Ronald Gordon aka “Flash Bang”

  RAIDING ROMMEL PREVIEW

  BOOK XI IN THE RAIDING FORCES SERIES

  1

  SNAFU

  Colonel John Randal was sitting in the empty bar of the Continental Hotel on the north end of Colbert Street in Vichy French Diego Suarez, Madagascar—the third largest natural harbor in the world. He was alone at a table with his back to the wall sitting in a huge bamboo chair with a clamshell fan back that went up three feet over the top of his head. The chairs were designed so that four of them could be pulled in close together to form a discrete private booth.

  It was that kind of place.

  Col. Randal was reading a brochure he had picked up in the lobby of the hotel when he checked in. Madagascar, aka the Red Island because of its scarlet-colored dust, was the fourth largest island on earth. It was like a tiny continent surrounded by the Indian Ocean. Originally settled by Asians, then the Bantus from East Afrika. Nowadays it was a Vichy French colony run by expatriate French citizens.

 

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