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W E B Griffin - Corp 07 - Behind the Lines

Page 11

by Behind The Lines(Lit)


  Hideyori's office formerly belonged to the General Manager of the Min-danao branch office of the Mackay Telephone & Telegraph Company. As he stood up, a large wall clock bearing the Mackay logotype began to strike the hour.

  "I understand you have intercepted some kind of radio message?" Saikaku demanded after he had returned the bow.

  "Yes, Sir."

  Saikaku impatiently put out his hand. Hideyori handed him a sheet of paper.

  MFS FOR US FORCES AUSTRALIA

  MFS FOR US FORCES AUSTRALIA

  ACNOW BRTSS DXSYT QRSHJ ERASH

  POFTP QOPOQ CHTFS SDHST ALITS

  CGHRZ QMSGL QROTZ VABCG LSTYE

  ACNOW BRTSS DXSYT QRSHJ ERASH

  POFTP QOPOQ CHTFS SDHST ALITS

  CGHRZ QMSGL QROTX VABCG LSTYE

  MFS STANDING BY FOR US FORCES AUSTRALIA

  MFS STANDING BY FOR US FORCES AUSTRALIA

  "That message is being transmitted hourly, Sir, in the twenty-meter band," Hideyori said.

  "For how many hours?"

  "The first message we intercepted was at ten o'clock this morning, Sir. They send the message repeatedly, for a period of three minutes."

  "Do you know from where?"

  "No, Sir."

  "I was led to believe, Hideyori, that it is within the capability of compe-tent signals people to locate the site of a transmitter by a process known as triangulation. Have I been misinformed?"

  "No, Sir."

  "Has this triangulation detection process begun?" "No, Sir. There is some difficulty with two of the trucks, Sir."

  "What sort of difficulty?"

  "Mechanical difficulty. Sir."

  "I really didn't think it would be spiritual difficulty, Hideyori."

  "Mechanical, Sir, as opposed to electrical. I have been informed the me-chanical trouble will be remedied first thing tomorrow."

  "Who told you this?"

  "Captain Kuroshio of the Transportation Section, Sir."

  "Be so good as to get Captain Kuroshio on the telephone, Hideyori."

  "Yes, Sir."

  Lieutenant Hideyori sat down, hastily consulted a mimeographed tele-phone book, dialed a number, spoke briefly with whoever answered, and then handed the telephone to Captain Saikaku.

  "Captain Kuroshio is being called to the phone, Sir," he reported. Saikaku took the telephone and waited, an impatient look on his face, until Captain Kuroshio came on the line.

  "This is Captain Saikaku of the Kempeitai," he announced. "Lieutenant Hideyori informs me you are in the process of repairing two trucks. These trucks are required for a Kempeitai operation. Required immediately. I want the necessary repairs to them begun immediately, and continued until the trucks are operating, if that means your mechanics work through the night. Do you understand me?"

  He listened to the reply, and then hung up.

  "As soon as the trucks are made available to you, Hideyori," he ordered, "I want them manned around the clock. The sooner we locate this station, the sooner we can shut it down."

  "Yes, Sir."

  "What is your opinion of the message? The code?"

  "I don't know what you mean, Sir."

  "How soon can I expect to know what message these people are sending?"

  "Sir, I took the liberty of sending the message to the Signals Intelligence Branch in Manila, asking them to attempt to decrypt the message."

  "You did this on your own authority?"

  "Yes, Sir. I believed it to be the thing to do."

  "You are to be commended on your initiative, Hideyori," Saikaku said.

  "Thank you, Sir."

  "Be so good as to inform the Signals Intelligence Branch that there is Kempeitai interest in this message."

  "Yes, Sir."

  "And inform them that as a suggestion to help in their decryption efforts-you better write this down, Hideyori-that the message may contain the words 'Fertig,"Brigadier,"General,' and 'U.S. Forces.' Fertig is a name. The other words may be abbreviated."

  "I'm sure Signals Intelligence Branch will be pleased to have your sug-gestion, Sir."

  "As soon as you have word on your trucks, or from Signals Intelligence, or of any development at all, inform me. Call my office, they will know where to locate me."

  "Yes, Sir."

  "What we have here, Hideyori, is a weed. If we pull it from the earth now, that will be the end of it. If it is allowed to grow, it will become an increasing nuisance."

  "I understand, Sir."

  "One final thing, Hideyori. Have your radio operators on the watch for messages addressed to MFS."

  "I have already ordered that, Sir."

  "Good," Saikaku said, then turned and walked out of Lieutenant Hide-yori's office.

  [SEVEN]

  Headquarters, U.S. Forces in the Philippines

  Davao Oriental Province

  Mindanao, Commonwealth of the Philippines

  1815 Hours 10 October 1942

  Lieutenant Ball heard through his earphones the sound of the carrier and then a string of dot and dashes.

  His heart beating and with tears in his eyes, he wrote down the letters:

  MFS KFS MFS KFS

  LPORD GHDSG NGFGP JKOWR DKLHI WRHFS SUHIO SWERI LPORD GHDSG NGFGP JKOWR DKLHI WRHFS SUHIO SWERI KFS CLR KFS CLR

  Prior to his attachment to Headquarters, USFIP, Ball had been a radio op-erator. He recognized the call sign of the answering station. "That's not Australia. It's a Navy Station. I think Hawaii." The message, when decoded, was brief:

  STAND BY AT 0600 YOUR TIME

  [EIGHT]

  Lieutenant Ball erred in part. While KFS was indeed a Navy radio station, it was not in Hawaii, but rather at the U.S. Navy Base, Mare Island, near San Francisco.

  And there the radio message had attracted the interest of a veteran chief radioman.

  "What the hell is this, Chief?" nineteen-year-old Radioman Third Class Daniel J. Miller, USN, asked, handing it to Dugan. "It's been coming in every hour on the hour in the twenty-meter band. Since yesterday."

  The Chief examined the message.

  "Whatever it is," he said. "It was encoded on an old Model 94. That sec-ond code group means 'Emergency SOI' "

  "What's a Model 94?"

  "An old-time crypto machine. They don't use them anymore," the Chief said thoughtfully.

  "Maybe the Japs captured one on Wake Island or someplace and are fucking with us."

  "What's an emergency SOI?"

  "It means you don't have a valid signal-operating instruction, so use the Emergency One," the Chief said absently, and then, thinking aloud, "And maybe they ain't."

  "Maybe aren't what?"

  "Fucking with us."

  "Then what the hell is this?" Miller asked.

  "I don't know," the Chief said. "But I'm going to find out."

  He consulted a typewritten list of telephone numbers taped to the slide in his desk, found the number of the Communications Section of the Presidio of San Francisco Army Base, and dialed it.

  "Commo, Sergeant Havell."

  "Chief Dugan. Let me speak to Sergeant Piedwell."

  "What can the Army do for the Navy?"

  "You're always telling me what hot shits you doggies are."

  "Statement of fact, Chief."

  "If I was to send you something encrypted on a Model 94, could you work it?"

  "If I had a Model 94,1 could. What's this?"

  "You got one, or not?"

  "Yeah, there's one in the vault. I saw it last week and wondered what the hell we were still doing with it."

  "I'm going to send a fine young man named Miller over there with a mes-sage that needs decryption. Out of school, OK, Piedwell?"

  "What kinda message?"

  "Use the Emergency Code," Chief Dugan said. "Whoever sent this didn't have a valid SOI."

  "What's this all about?"

  "When I find out, I'll tell you. But in the meantime, just do it, and keep it under your hat, OK?"

  "What the hell, why not?"

/>   "Thanks, Piedwell."

  Two hours later, Radioman Third Miller was back from the Presidio with a blank, sealed, business-size envelope. When Chief Dugan opened it, he found a single sheet of typewriter paper inside:

  WE HAVE THE HOT POOP FROM THE HOT YANKS IN THE PHILS FERTIG BRIG GEN

  Dugan handed it to Radioman Third Miller.

  "What's this mean?" Miller asked.

  "It could mean the Japs found a Model 94 and are fucking with us," Chief Dugan said. "And it could mean it's for real."

  He refolded the sheet of paper and put it back in the envelope.

  "The next time these people come on the air, send them 'Stand by at 0600 your time,' " Chief Dugan said, and stood up. "I'll be back as soon as I get back," he said.

  "Where are you going, in case somebody asks?"

  "I'm going to tell the Admiral how to run the war," Chief Dugan said.

  "I mean, really."

  "Chief petty officers never lie, son. Write that on the palm of your hand so you never forget it," Chief Dugan said, put on his jacket and hat, and left the radio room.

  "Long time no see, Dugan," Rear Admiral F. Winston Bloomer, USN, said. "You can spell that either 'sss eee eee' or 'sss eee aaa.' Coffee?"

  "Thank you, Sir," Dugan said.

  The Admiral and the Chief went back a long way, to when the Admiral had been a lieutenant (j.g.) commo officer on an old four-stacker tin-can and the Chief had been a radioman striker.

  Dugan handed Admiral Bloomer the envelope, then helped himself to a cup of coffee from the Admiral's thermos. "OK. What is it?" the Admiral asked.

  "Somebody's transmitting that on the twenty-meter band for a couple of minutes every hour on the hour. It was encoded on a Model 94, no SOI."

  "A Model 94? They haven't used those for years. Japanese playing with us? They captured one somewhere? Wake Island, maybe? Or in the Philip-pines?"

  "It may be the real thing."

  "What do you want to do, Dugan?"

  "I want to find out if there is a brigadier general named Fertig."

  "In other words, you want me to go to Naval Intelligence for you?"

  "I've got a pal who can find out for me in a hurry."

  "Why does that make me uncomfortable?" Admiral Bloomer asked, add-ing, "Faster than ONI?"-The Office of Naval Intelligence-"Who does your pal work for, the President?"

  "The Secretary of the Navy has an administrative assistant. The adminis-trative assistant has a Chief who works for him."

  "And you know where he buried the body, right, Dugan?"

  "Bodies, Admiral."

  "I don't want to know about this, Dugan. But if you get in trouble, you have my phone number."

  "Thank you," Dugan said. "What if I find out something?"

  "Yes, please, Dugan. Keep me posted. I hope this is genuine."

  "Thank you, Sir."

  Radioman Third Miller walked up to Chief Dugan's desk and handed him a sheet of paper.

  "This what you've been waiting for, Chief?"

  URGENT

  FROM SECNAV

  FOR OFFICER COMMANDING

  US NAVY BASE MARE ISLAND

  ATTN: CPO EDWARD B DUGAN, USN

  THERE IS NO GENERAL FERTIG IN US ARMY OR USMC

  LTCOL WENDELL W. FERTIG CORPS OF ENGINEERS, USARMY RESERVE REPORTED MISSING AND PRESUMED JAPANESE POW ON BATAAN.

  LTCOL FERTIGS NEXT OF KIN WIFE MRS MARY HAMPTON FERTIG, GOLDEN, COLORADO DOB 11MAY1905

  BY DIRECTION SECNAV

  HAUGHTON CAPT USN ADMIN OFF TO SECNAV

  BY HANSEN CPO USN

  Dugan read the teletype message.

  "What time is it here when it's 0600 in the Philippines?" he asked.

  "I don't know, Chief."

  "You don't know? My God, Miller, you're a radioman third, you're sup-posed to know that kind of thing. Find out, and be here when it is."

  "You know what time it will be here, right?"

  "Of course. I'm a chief."

  Dugan stood up and put on his cap and jacket.

  "I'll be back when I'm back," he said.

  "You're going to tell the Admiral how to run the war again, right?"

  "Actually, I'm going over to the Presidio to talk the Army into loaning me their Model 94."

  Radioman Third Miller put his fingers to his radiotelegraph key:

  KFS TO MFS

  KFS TO MFS

  BY

  The reply came immediately. Chief Dugan looked over Miller's shoulder as the words appeared on his typewriter.

  MFS T OKFS

  STANDING BY

  "Send it," Chief Dugan ordered.

  Miller took his right hand from the typewriter keys and put it onto the ra-diotelegraph key.

  KFS TO MFS

  SEND ENCRYPTED MAIDEN NAME FERTIGS NEXT OF KIN AND DATE OF BIRTH

  STANDING BY

  There was no reply for several minutes.

  "They're either encoding it, or we're talking to the Japs, and they're won-dering what the hell to do now," Chief Dugan said. And then there was a reply:

  MFS TO KFS

  JIOQT LPITZ SHDQW JFIUO GMCIT

  PSATY SDERJ HQWKM JEWRP AITCD

  ITDFS EWNOR HSQIT SDRTP CFENG

  JIOQT LPITZ SHDQW JFIUO GMCIT

  PSATY SDERJ HQWKM JEWRP AITCD

  ITDFS EWNOR HSQIT SDRTP CFENG

  MFS BY

  Chief Dugan ripped the sheet of paper from Miller's typewriter, walked quickly back to his desk, and operated the Model 94 Cryptographic Device he had borrowed from the Army at God only knew what cost in future favors to be repaid.

  "Miller," he called, and paused a moment as if he was trying to regain control of his voice. "Send 'We are ready for your traffic' "

  "No shit? It's for real?"

  "Belay that. Send 'Welcome to the net. We are ready for your traffic' "

  Chief Dugan reached for his telephone.

  "Operator, Chief Dugan. Long Distance Priority Code Sixteen-B. Get me Mrs. Mary Fertig in Golden, Colorado."

  Radioman Third Miller, without stopping his tapping on his key, called over his shoulder:

  "Chief, you think you should do that without asking somebody?" "If I ask somebody, they'd likely tell me not to," Chief Dugan said. Mrs. Mary Fertig came on the line two minutes later. "Mrs. Fertig, this is Chief Dugan, Mare Island Navy Base."

  "Yes?"

  "Ma'am, I think we have just heard from your husband. General Fertig?"

  "You must be mistaken. My husband is Major Fertig. And he's in the

  Philippines."

  Radioman Miller handed Chief Dugan another sheet of paper, and then

  hurried back to his typewriter.

  "Ma'am," Chief Dugan said, "let me read you something. 'For Mrs. Fer-tig. Quote. Pineapples for breakfast. Love. End quote.' Does that mean any-thing to you?"

  There was a long pause.

  "Yes, that means something. It means my husband is on the island of Min-danao. We used to go there often, to play golf on the Dole Plantation. We al-ways had pineapples for breakfast."

  "Yes, Ma'am."

  "Is there any way I can get a message to my husband?"

  "Yes, Ma'am. A short one. What would you like to say?"

  There was another pause.

  "Please tell him all is well. And send love."

  "Yes, Ma'am. I'll try to get that to him right away. Ma'am, I'm sure some people will be in touch with you. Maybe, when they come to see you, it would be better if you didn't tell them I called you."

 

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