by A. J Tata
Two U.S. F-117 stealth bombers flew low across the water, like bats hunting insects, and dropped precision-guided munitions into each of the cargo ships that had off-loaded the Japanese weapons. Black smoke billowed high into the night, black on black, dimming the Manila City lights from Zachary’s vantage point.
His troops watched the display of combined arms warfare in awe. Naval gunfire began to pound the remaining Japanese vehicles positioned along the pier where the ammunition had been stacked—and from where Ayala had attacked.
“I guess this is what they meant when they said we were the main effort, huh, sir?” asked Slick, who had listened in on the battalion operations order earlier that afternoon.
Zachary didn’t answer. He watched as he saw an F-16 explode in the sky with a bright fury that momentarily lit the entire engagement area to include the ever-resilient white Quonset huts. Like a star cluster, pieces of the jet sprinkled down, seeming lighter and less dangerous than they really were, and fizzled in the water just off the pier.
Was it theirs or ours?
Who knew? Only the pilots fighting in the skies and the AWACS airplane reading squawk signals and directing traffic.
Curiously, it occurred to Zachary that it was his company that had made all of this possible. Without his guys, America’s course would have been much different. Then of course, there was Chuck Ramsey and his team to think about. And his brother, Matt.
Must get them both. Matt, where can you be? Are you safe? Chuck, has the Black Hawk found you?
CHAPTER 83
Zachary watched as Major Kooseman briefed the operations order. Kooseman had done well for being thrust into command during a raging battle. The tall major spoke nonchalantly about their next mission, a sharp contrast to the befuddlement of Colonel Buck, Zachary thought, then realized Buck was dead and squelched the thought.
“Right now, guys,” Kooseman said, “we’ve got two Ranger battalions hiding in the jungle, pinned down by an armored division. Over two hundred tanks.”
The group of captains, the commanders, collectively rolled their eyes and tightened their sphincters, waiting for the word that they were going to join the fray. The previous night’s battle had given most of the soldiers in the battalion their first taste of war. Many were already battle-stress casualties, having watched Japanese helicopters fire 30mm chain guns, mowing down their buddies, killing them. Only B Company’s precision fire had saved them by destroying many of the deadly attack helicopters.
The battle still raged on the perimeter. Naval gunfire popped in the offing, M1 tanks fired as if they were making headway, jets screamed overhead, helicopters came and went continuously, and, of course, the supply planes landed through it all.
They sat on the crusty, dried lava from Mount Pinatubo, amidst all the noise, just to the north of the white Quonset huts. The battalion was arrayed in the center as the brigade reserve, with the other two battalions securing the main avenues of approach into the naval base. Planes were landing every five minutes with support troops and supplies, trying to develop sufficient combat power to sustain extended operations.
Water was an issue, and it came rolling off the C-17s by the truckload. The heat had soared to over 115 degrees. The intelligence officer, Chip McCranum, had briefed that the heat was here to stay, with no relief in sight. As Zachary listened, he was reminded of George Carlin’s “Hippy-Dippy Weatherman”: ”During the night, dark, very dark. But when the sun comes up, light, very light.”
Tell me something I don’t know for a change.
Kooseman stood again, rising from the white dust and brushing his army combat uniform. Wisps of white dirt exploded off his pants. He squinted as the sun tried to reach inside his eyelids and fry his pupils.
“Tomorrow morning at 0400, we attack to seize the prison at Cabanatuan.” He made circling motions with his hands on the map that was positioned on an easel. “Our actions will be in concert with the Rangers, who will move from the jungles in the east as a feint to make contact with the enemy, draw their fire, allowing us to attack from the west.”
He continued to describe the mission. Zachary’s ears perked up when he heard his company men-tioned.
“B Company will attack to secure the road that joins Cabanatuan and Fort Magsaysay,” he said, pointing to a small line on the map that represented the three-mile road. “Zachary, your unit will establish blocking positions preventing enemy reinforcement either way.”
“Got it,” Zachary said, making a note to get with Kooseman later. He hated when other commanders interrupted the order with their parochial questions, and he had vowed never to do it.
“A Company and C Company, you’ll be coming with me into the prison of Cabanatuan. We will attack to seize the prison from enemy control, then our mission will revert to one of protecting the Filipinos. D Company, you’ll be in reserve, but I want you right behind us as we land and move in to attack the prison. Once we land, I expect that the Japanese will divert some forces from Magsaysay, where they have two battalions, and try to counterattack into Cabanatuan. Zachary, you’ve got to stop those guys.”
“Got it.”
Three battalions of tanks against a light infantry brigade. Zachary shook his head. Those zoomies better get out of the O-Club and fly then, dammit.
A hot wind blew across the hardstand, circling into a miniature funnel, picking up twigs and grass and disappearing. Zachary looked skyward, thinking that the entire operation depended on aircraft. They were using helicopters to air-assault into the objective area, and they needed attack helicopters and Air Force fighters to destroy the tanks.
Zachary squinted into the noonday sun, wondering if the air support would be able to do anything more than get them there.
CHAPTER 84
“Japs, can you believe it?” Sturgeon said to Matt and Barefoot, crouched low in the dirt behind a cluster of thick mahogany trees. The consensus was no, they could not believe it. With Japanese soldiers swarming around them, they had little time to discuss the matter. Are they friendly or enemy? Should we give ourselves up? Is this a joint operation with the United States and Japan trying to put down the rebellion? Even though Matt had theorized on that very occurrence, he was shocked at its reality.
But his brief stay in Mindanao was beginning to make some sense. World War I was to Germany’s rise as World War II was to Japan’s emergence today.
They had spent the first night lying silently on the reverse slope of the wooded knoll. Barefoot had packed his satellite gear and stashed it for fear of emitting a signal that the Japanese could detect. They were out of water and food, but the continuous procession of Japanese tanks and infantry fighting vehicles made any move impossible. It seemed that the three-mile road between Cabanatuan and Fort Magsaysay was a main supply route for the Japanese.
A small Japanese patrol had wandered aimlessly into the tree line less than a hundred meters from their hide position. The squad of seven sat in the shade, drank from their canteens, and joked in their native language. Matt could see that one was carrying a Shin Chuo Kogyo submachine gun, normally a tanker’s weapon. Another had a Type 62 machine gun slung across his shoulder with two belts of 7.62mm ammunition wrapped around his body. The weapon had a small telescopic sight perched atop the rear sight assembly. The others were carrying M16A2 rifles.
They sat upon the grave, unsuspecting, and departed without incident when one of the members, probably the leader, stood and began to walk back to the west, toward Cabanatuan.
Earlier, they had witnessed the spectacular airdrop of hundreds of paratroopers at two in the morning. Barefoot had been on watch, and he awoke the others as he had spied the C-130s flying about two hundred meters above the ground discharging hundreds of soldiers. Immediately orange tracers were seeking out the elite soldiers as they fluttered to the ground. Who was friendly and who was enemy?
They could still hear gunfire as the curtain closed on a second day on the knoll. Matt was unaware that Barefoot’s transmission had se
t the entire mission in operation. But still they were unsure. Were those American soldiers jumping in the middle of the night, or Filipinos? It had been too dark to tell. The Armed Forces of the Philippines certainly had C-130s capable of dropping soldiers. Had the insurgents pirated the airplanes? Were they now fighting Japanese forces?
“We need to try to link up with those paratroopers,” Matt said.
“I’m game for anything,” Barefoot added, his dark skin white from the dust.
“Okay, about two in the morning, we’ll run along the ridge to the west,” Matt said, pointing to his left. “We also need to find some water, so as we move, let’s see if we can’t find a well or something. After that, maybe we can steal a truck and haul ass.”
It was risky, it was loose-knit, and it was desperate. But they were desperate men.
Matt shook Jack and Barefoot until they both wakened.
“Time to go?” Sturgeon asked in his groggy voice.
“Yeah. It’s a little bit before two. The shooting’s stopped some. Figured it would be a good time to bolt,” Matt said, adrenaline pumping through his body, creating a sense of alertness. He held his pistol in his hand, popped the magazine out, and counted bullets. Six. He had seven shots including the round in the chamber.
“Good, let’s book,” Jack said.
“What should I do with this shit?” Barefoot said, patting his satellite gear. It was really too much to carry but could prove useful in the future.
“Leave it here, but bring the tape of Rathburn’s burial. If we have time, we’ll circle back and get the equipment. But more than likely, we’ll just have to scrap it,” Matt said.
“Okay,” Barefoot agreed. After all, it was his equipment. He pulled the tape of Rathburn’s burial out of the camera and stuffed it into his pocket, then covered the expensive gear with some leaves and branches, hoping they could come back for it. As a soldier is attached to his personal gear, Barefoot had his affections for his own equipment. He knew its minor quirks and what buttons he had to push to make the stuff work. With regret, he laid the last branch on the pile, as if he had conducted a burial.
They stood and moved in single file beneath the towering mahogany trees, stepping lightly over the high roots, following a trail that led the mile to Cabanatuan. Jack and Matt carried their pistols in hand at the ready, poised for self-defense. They slipped through the woods as silent as the wind, as if they had trained for it. They were hungry, thirsty, and tired.
They were acting on instinct, like cavemen or animals. They had to satisfy bodily needs, or they would die. It was a simple calculation. Either get up and move, or die from heat exhaustion and hunger.
Lacking energy, but full of adrenaline, somehow they managed to wind their way through the hills and find a perch from which they could survey the half-lit town of Cabanatuan. In the prone, they lay next to each other and watched as green Army trucks ambled back and forth along the white cement road less than seventy-five meters away. The trucks coughed and spit diesel into the air, masking the trio’s movement down to the back of a thatch hut.
One of the drivers unprofessionally turned on his lights, making the small village visible. Matt noticed and said, “Come, this way.”
Sturgeon and Barefoot followed as they ran behind a series of thatch huts.
“Over there,” Matt said, pointing. “It’s a school. They always have wells at their schools.”
They ran, crouched low, heading toward a wooden building that contrasted with the thatch huts. Oddly, they crossed over a dirt court with two baskets at the other end. These guys play basketball? Matt wondered. Reaching the building, they huddled against the wall as headlights traced a line above their heads, finally turning away.
“Must be on the other side,” Matt said, “I don’t see shit over here.”
“Let’s go.”
They ran to the back of the school building, which was a modest, one-room affair that looked more like an old country church without the steeple.
There it was. The pump handle was cocked high in the air above the open-lipped spout. The area beneath the spout was muddy, a good indicator the pump was functional.
The three men scampered to the device, pulling their canteens off their belts. Matt grabbed the handle and pumped hard, letting the others drink from the spout, then fill their canteens. When they were done, Matt stooped low, kneeling in the mud, and drank. He drank some more. Then he gulped down more water, letting it spill across his face. Finally, he opened his mouth again, letting the force of the liquid push open his throat, and race down, nearly causing him to choke.
He felt his body rehydrate. Glistening beads of sweat formed on his dusty arms beneath his torn sleeves. He filled his canteen, letting the water spill on his arms, then he stuck his head beneath the rushing water. That was why he did not hear the first shot.
The first shot caught Jack square in the top of the thigh, cracking his femur. Then the gunfire came pouring forth, kicking dirt into the air. White puffs of dust rose into the blackness of the night.
Barefoot pulled Matt from under the pump, then flipped Sturgeon over his shoulders with acrobatic ease. Matt yanked his pistol from the waist of his pants and began searching for muzzle flashes, back-pedaling as he followed Barefoot back toward the woods.
As they rounded the school, they saw ten Jap-anese soldiers coming from the other corner. They had an opening, however small. If they could only race back behind the thatch huts and get in the woods, they would stand a chance.
Barefoot ran with large steps, his gait like that of a show horse. His powerful frame seemed none the worse from the weight of Jack. Matt saw Jack’s face, grimacing in pain, as his blood drained onto Barefoot’s shirt.
From behind the row of thatch huts jumped an aggressive Japanese soldier, holding a Kogyo submachine gun with folding stock. He yelled something indiscernible to the group of Americans and raised his weapon to fire.
Matt stopped, crouched, and fired one round into the soldier’s forehead, thirty meters away. The enemy soldier—and they now knew them to be enemy—stood still, as if there were something he could do about his mortal wound, then fell back-ward to the ground, dead.
As they passed the dead man, Matt saw that his face was covered in blood. He stooped and stole the man’s weapon on the fly, never breaking stride.
Matt felt a hot, stinging sensation in his lower right leg, like a snakebite. He looked down and saw that his trousers were shredded along his right calf. Other bullets punched into the ground around him. Only a graze.
They crested the rise and entered the wooded area, then hurriedly followed the trail, winding through the trees as if they were racing down a ski slalom.
“Go back to the equipment, I’ll meet you there,” Matt said. Barefoot nodded and continued to run, starting to tire from the weight. Matt pulled off the path and circled back. He quickly checked his weapon. He did not know what it was, but figured if he pulled the trigger, it would shoot.
The path to Zachary is through these bastards, Matt thought as he waited.
CHAPTER 85
They darted into a clearing, then pulled away like a ride at the local carnival. Zachary peered out of the open door, the wind beating the back of his head, and saw at least thirty other UH-60 Black Hawks performing similar maneuvers into the false insertion area.
Two minutes out, Zachary thought. He looked at his watch, then cut a gaze at Slick, who gave him a thumbs-up. The trusty RTO. In many respects, there was no better friend to a commander. Confidant, friend, lackey, supporter, idea man, humorist, the RTO was always there, always ready, always prepared. Slick was typical, with his wry sense of humor and devastating ability to make the commander laugh when he least expected it. It was tough humping the thirty pounds of radio gear and living with the commander. Often it took a special breed.
Zachary carried the company net radio in his own rucksack. He saw no need to suck another soldier away from the platoons when he was stronger than most in the compa
ny. Slick would monitor Major Kooseman and the other company commanders on battalion net, and Zachary would maneuver the company through the platoon leaders on the company net. The platoon leaders would then maneuver their squads on platoon nets.
Oh shit. Orange tracers rocketed skyward at the helicopters as they came in for a hot landing between Cabanatuan and Fort Magsaysay. The helicopters banked hard and low, pushing the envelope trying to gain cover. They touched down for a brief moment behind a large wooded knoll, discharged their pas-sengers, then pulled away, turning toward the west to make another lift.
They would make it back in time before the first heavy storm of the wet season.
Zachary took a knee and watched the beauty of the battalion air assault. In training, they had never had the opportunity to perform entire battalion lifts, and the sight of the helicopters pulling away like a swarm of wasps impressed him. He watched and listened to the battalion radio net as McAllister’s company took the lead for the assault into Caba-natuan.
McAllister’s voice gave him comfort again. He was among friends. No longer was his company isolated, the world surrounding them.
“Let’s move to checkpoint three-one, over,” he said into his company net.
Taylor, Kurtz, and Barker acknowledged. Zachary and his platoon leaders gathered their men, formed into a series of wedges, and headed toward the wooded knoll.
Matt had decided to use the pistol first, waited until the lead soldier was less than thirty meters away, then pulled the trigger. He needed to buy Sturgeon and Barefoot some time, and this was the best way.
As he watched the man drop like a shot quail, he grabbed the submachine gun and fired into the confused mass. The weapon jumped wildly in his hands, but he was hitting his targets. He saw three others fall to the ground.