"Banning said that he thought I should have you transferred to this lash-up and that I should consider, somewhere down the line, even sending you to officer candidate school."
McCoy didn't know how to respond.
In Japanese, Colonel Rickabee said, "I understand you're reasonably fluent in Japanese and Chinese."
"I wouldn't say fluent, sir-"
"Say it in Japanese," Rickabee interrupted.
"I can't read very much Japanese, sir," McCoy said, in Japanese. "And my Chinese isn't much better."
Rickabee nodded approvingly. "That's good enough," he continued in Japanese, and then switched to English. "We can use that talent. But there's a question of priorities. When we knew you were coming here, McCoy, what we planned to do with you was to have you replace Sergeant Ruttman. I want to run him through Quantico, too. He thinks he's been successfully evading it. The truth is that I needed somebody to take his place while he was gone. You seemed ideal to do that. You're a hardnose, and it would give you a chance to see how things are done here. But the best-laid plans, as they say. There are higher priorities. Specifically, the boss has levied on us-and I mean the boss personally, not one of his staff-for three officer couriers. We're moving a lot of paper back and forth between here and Pearl and here and Manila, especially now that the Fourth is in the Philippines. You're elected as one of the three, McCoy."
"Sir, I don't know what an officer courier is."
"There are some highly classified documents, and sometimes material, that have to pass from hand to hand, from a specific officer here to a specific officer someplace else-as opposed to headquarters to headquarters. That material has to be transported by an officer.''
"Yes, sir," McCoy said.
"There's one other factor in the equation," Rickabee said. "The Pacific-especially Pearl Harbor, but Cavite too-has been playing dirty pool. We have sent officer couriers out there with the understanding that they would make one trip and then return to their primary duty. What Pearl has done twice, and Cavite once, is to keep our couriers and send the homeward-bound mail in the company of an officer they didn't particularly need. We have lost two cryptographic officers and one very good intercept officer that way."
McCoy knew that a cryptographic officer dealt with secret codes, but he had no ideas what an "intercept" officer was.
"I've complained, of course, and eventually we'll get them back, after everything has moved, slowly, through channels. But I can't afford to lose people for sixty, ninety days. Not now. So there had to be a solution, and Major Almond found it."
McCoy said nothing.
"Aren't you even curious, McCoy?" Rickabee asked.
"Yes, sir."
"Every officer in the Marine Corps is required to obey the orders of any officer superior to him, right?"
"Yes, sir."
"If the orders conflict, he is required to obey the orders given him by the most senior officer, right?"
"Yes, sir."
"Wrong," Rickabee said. "Or at least, there is an interesting variation. There is a small, generally unknown group of people in the Corps who don't have to obey the orders of superior officers, unless that officer happens to be the chief of intelligence. Their ranks aren't even known. Just their name and photo and thumbprint is on their ID cards. And the ID cards say that the bearer is a Special Agent of the Assistant Chief of Staff, Intelligence, USMC, and subject only to his orders."
"Yes, sir."
"Congratulations, Lieutenant McCoy, you are now-or you will be when Ruttman finishes your credentials-a Special Agent of the Assistant Chief of Staff for Intelligence. If anybody at Pearl or Cavite knows, or finds out, that you speak Japanese and decides they just can't afford to lose you, you will show them your identification and tell them you are sorry, but you are not subject to their orders."
Rickabee saw the confusion on McCoy's face.
"Question, McCoy?"
"Am I going to Pearl Harbor, sir?"
"And Cavite," Rickabee said. "More important, I think you will be coming back from Pearl and Cavite."
"And you can get away with giving me one of these cards?"
"For the time being," Rickabee said. "When they catch us, I'm sure Major Almond will think of something else clever."
"Let me make it clear, Lieutenant McCoy," Major Almond said, "that the identification, and the authority that goes with it, is perfectly legitimate. The personnel engaged in counterespionage activity who are issued such credentials are under this office."
"Major Almond pointed out to me, McCoy, that I had the discretionary authority to issue as many of them as I saw fit."
"Yes, sir."
"We don't wish to call attention to the fact that people like you will have them," Rickabee said. "For obvious reasons. You will travel in uniform on regular travel orders, and you will not show the identification unless you have to. You understand that?"
"Yes, sir."
"I don't know how long we'll have to keep you doing this, McCoy," Colonel Rickabee said. "We have a certain priority for personnel, but so do other people. And that FBI background check takes time. And the FBI is overloaded with them. You'll just have to take my word for it that as soon as I can get you off messenger-boy duty and put you to work doing something useful to us, I will."
"Yes, sir."
"What's his schedule, Jake?" Rickabee asked.
"Well, today of course there are administrative things to do. Get him a pistol, get his orders cut. That may run into tomorrow morning. He'll need some time to get his personal affairs in order. But there's no reason he can't leave here on Wednesday night, Thursday morning at the latest. Presuming there's not fifty people ahead of him in San Francisco also with AAA priority, that should put him in Pearl no later than Monday, December eighth, and into Manila on the tenth."
"Is that cutting it too close for you, McCoy?" Colonel Rickabee asked.
"No, sir," McCoy said, immediately.
Rickabee nodded.
"Take him to lunch at the Army-Navy Club, Jake," Colonel Rickabee ordered. "Sign my name to the chit."
"Aye, aye, sir," Major Almond said.
"I like to do that myself," Rickabee said, turning to McCoy. "We don't have time for many customs of the service around here; but when I can, I like to have a newly reported-aboard officer to dinner. Or at least take him to lunch. But I just don't have the time today. Won't have it before you go to Pearl. I'm really sorry."
Then he stood up and offered his hand.
"Welcome aboard, McCoy," he said. "I'm sorry your first assignment is such a lousy one. But it happens sometimes that way in the Corps."
He headed out of his office, and then stopped at the door.
"Get him out of the BOQ before he goes," he said. "If there's no time to find a place for him, have his gear brought here, and we'll stow it while he's gone, until we can find something."
"He's got a room in the Lafayette, sir."
"I'll be damned," Colonel Rickabee said. "But then Ed Banning did say I would find you extraordinary."
For some reason, McCoy thought, it was no longer hard to think of F.L. Rickabee as a lieutenant colonel of Marines.
(Three)
Second Lieutenant Malcolm Pickering, USMCR, was sitting in the maid's room's sole armchair, his feet up on the cot. When Second Lieutenant Kenneth J. McCoy, USMCR, carrying a briefcase, entered the room, Pickering was in the act of replacing a bottle of ale in an ice-filled silver wine-cooler he had borrowed from the bridal suite.
"What the hell are you doing with a briefcase?" Pick asked.
"That's not all," McCoy said. "Wait till I tell-"
Pickering shut him off by holding up his hand.
"Wait a minute," he said. "I've got if not bad then discomfitting news."
"Discomfit me, then," McCoy mocked him. "Fuck up what otherwise has been a glorious day."
"My general thinks you should move into the BOQ," Pickering said.
"Oh, shit!" McCoy said. "What the fuck business
is it of his, anyway?"
"He's a nice guy," Pickering said. "He and my father were corporals together, and he stayed in the Corps. He's trying to be nice."
"Sure," McCoy said. "Just a friendly word of advice, my boy. An officer is judged by the company he keeps. Disassociate yourself from that former enlisted man."
"Jesus Christ," Pick said without thinking. "You do have a runaway social inferiority complex, don't you?"
"Fuck you," McCoy said.
"It's not like that at all, goddamn your thick head. What he's worried about is getting you in trouble with Intelligence."
"What?" McCoy asked.
"I don't know if you know this or not," Pickering said. "But the Corps has intelligence agents, counterintelligence agents. What they do is look for security risks."
"No shit?" McCoy asked.
"Listen to me, goddamn you!" Pickering said. "What these guys do is look for something unusual. Like second lieutenants living in hotels like the Lafayette. Expensive hotels. They would start asking where you got the money to pay for the bill."
"Special agents of the Deputy Chief of Staff for Intelligence, USMC, you mean?" McCoy asked, smiling broadly.
"You know about them, then? Goddamn it, Ken, it's not funny."
"It's the funniest thing I heard of all day," McCoy said. He took off his jacket, and then opened the briefcase.
"What the hell are you doing?" Pickering asked.
McCoy took a leather-and-rubber strap arrangement that only after a moment Pickering recognized as a shoulder holster. He slipped his arms in it, and then took a Colt 1911A1 from the briefcase and put it in the holster. Then he put his tunic back on.
"Goddamn you, you haven't listened to a word I've said," Pickering said.
"Well, I may be dumb," McCoy said. "But you're a Japanese spy if I ever saw one. Come with me, young man. If you cooperate, it will go easier on you."
It was some kind of joke, obviously, but Pickering didn't have any idea where the humor lay.
McCoy took a small leather folder from his hip pocket, opened it, and shoved it in Pickering's face.
"Special Agent McCoy," he announced triumphantly. "You're a dead man, you filthy Jap spy!"
"What the hell is that?" Pickering asked, snatching it out of his hand, and then looking at it carefully. "Is this for real? What is it?"
"It's for real," McCoy said. "And it's my ticket to sunny Hawaii and other spots in the romantic Orient." "It's for real?" Pickering repeated, in disbelief. "Well, not really real," McCoy said. "I mean it's genuine, but I'm not in counterintelligence. I'm an officer courier. They gave me that so no one will fuck with me on the swift completion of my appointed rounds."
Pickering demanded a more detailed explanation of what had gone on.
"But how did you get involved in intelligence in the first place?"
"That's what I did in China," McCoy said. It was the first time he had ever told anyone that. He remembered just before he'd boarded the Charles E. Whaley, Captain Banning ordering him not to tell anyone in or out of the Corps about it. But that order had been superceded by his most recent order, from Major J.J. Almond:
"You'll have to tell your roommate something, McCoy. You can say where you work, advising him that it is classified information. And what you do, because that in itself is not classified."
And with the 4th Marines gone from Shanghai, there didn't seem to be any point in pretending that he hadn't done what he had done. And it was nice to have an appreciative audience, an audience that had previously believed he had been a truck driver.
"The important thing," he said finally, when he realized that he was tooting his own horn too much, "is that my colonel doesn't want me in the BOQ. So where does that leave us?"
Pickering reached for the telephone.
"This is Malcolm Pickering," he said. "Will you get the resident manager on here, please?"
When the resident manager came on the line, Pickering told him there had been "another change in plans."
"I will need that suite," he said. "Lieutenant McCoy and I will be here for the indefinite future."
They went down to dinner. There Pickering talked about flight school.
"I'm going to take a flight physical Thursday afternoon," he said. "If I pass it, I think I'm going to go for it."
And then they began a lengthy, and ultimately futile, search for a couple of skirts to lift.
It did not dampen their spirits at all. There was always tomorrow, and the day after tomorrow, and the week after that. There were supposed to be twice as many women as men in Washington…
Despite the legend, McCoy said, it had been his experience that a Marine uniform was a bar to getting laid. When he came back from Hawaii and Manila, they would do their pussy-chasing in civilian clothes.
(Four)
Security Intelligence Section
U.S. Naval Communications
Washington, D.C.
1540 Hours, Wednesday, 3 December 1941
The sign on the door said OP-20-G, and there was a little window in it, like a speak-easy. When McCoy rang the bell, a face appeared in it.
"Lieutenant McCoy to see Commander Kramer," McCoy announced
"I'll need to see your ID, Lieutenant," the face said.
McCoy held the little leather folder up to the window. The man took his sweet time examining it, but finally the door opened.
"The commander expected you five minutes ago," the face said. The face was now revealed as a chief radioman.
"The traffic was bad," McCoy said.
He followed the chief down a passageway, where the chief knocked at a door. When he announced who he was, there was the sound of a solenoid opening a bolt.
"Lieutenant McCoy, Commander," the chief said. "His ID checks."
"I'm sure he won't mind if I check it again," a somewhat nasal voice said.
Commander Kramer was a tall, thin officer with a pencil-line mustache. He looked at McCoy's credentials and then handed them back.
"I was about to say that we don't get many second lieutenants as couriers," Kramer said. "That is now changed to 'we don't get to see much identification like that.' "
"No, sir," McCoy said.
"Are you armed, Lieutenant?"
"Yes, sir."
"And you're leaving when?"
"At sixteen-thirty, sir."
"From Anacostia, you mean?"
"Yes, sir. Naval aircraft at least as far as San Francisco."
"You normally work for Colonel Rickabee, is that it?"
"Yes, sir."
"I heard that they had levied him for officer couriers," Kramer said. "I'm sorry you were caught in the net. But it wouldn't have been done if it wasn't necessary."
"I don't mind, sir," McCoy said, solemnly.
Instead of heading around the world by airplane, I would of course prefer to be here in Washington inventorying paper clips. Or better than that, at Camp LeJeune running around in the boondocks, practicing "the infantry platoon in the assault."
"Your briefcase is going to be stuffed," Kramer said. "She was sealing the envelopes just now. I'll have her bring them in."
He pushed a lever on an intercom.
"Mrs. Feller, the courier is here. Would you bring the material for Pearl Harbor in here, please?"
Mrs. Feller?
Ellen Feller backed into Commander Kramer's office with a ten-inch-thick stack of heavy manila envelopes held against her breast.
"Mrs. Feller, this is Lieutenant McCoy," Commander Kramer said.
"The lieutenant and I are old friends," Ellen said.
"Really?"
"We got to know one another rather well in China, didn't we, Ken?"
"You don't seem very surprised to see me," McCoy said.
"I knew you were here," she said. "I didn't expect to see you so soon, but I did hope to see you."
"May I suggest you get on with the document transfer?" Commander Kramer said, a tinge of annoyance in his voice. "Lieutenant McCoy has a
sixteen-thirty plane to catch at Anacostia."
There were thirteen envelopes in the stack Ellen Feller laid on Commander Kramer's desk. There was a numbered receipt to be signed for each of them, and McCoy had to place his signature across the tape sealing the flap at the place where it would be broken if the envelope was opened.
It took some time to go through the paperwork and stuff the unyielding envelopes into the briefcase. Enough time for Commander Kramer to regret jumping on both of them.
"Ellen," he said. "If you wished to continue your reunion with the lieutenant, there's no reason you can't ride out to Anacostia with him."
"Oh, I'd like that," Ellen said.
McCoy took the handcuffs from his hip pocket and looped one cuff through the handle of the briefcase, then held out his wrist for Kramer to loop the other cuff around it.
"Have a good trip, Lieutenant," Commander Kramer said, offering his hand. He then held the door for both of them to pass through.
"My coat's just down the corridor," Ellen said.
A Navy gray Plymouth station wagon and a sailor driver waited for them at the entrance. McCoy had ridden over to OP-20-G in the front seat with him, but when the sailor saw Ellen Feller, he ran around and held the back door open for her. McCoy hesitated a moment before he got in beside her, holding the heavy briefcase on his lap.
"You were right," Ellen said, as they drove off.
"About what?"
"That I could probably find a job because I speak Chinese." She switched to Chinese. "The first place I applied was to the Navy, and they hired me right on. As a translator. But there's not that much to translate, so I've become sort of office manager. I'm a GS-6."
"I don't know what that means," McCoy said, relieved that they could speak Chinese and the driver wouldn't understand them. "Where's your husband?"
"He's in New York, busy with his work," she said.
"You manage to smuggle the vase in all right?" McCoy asked
She raised her eyebrows at the question, but didn't answer it.
"I have a nice little apartment here," she said. "You'll have to come see it."
"The last time I saw you, you-seemed damned glad to be getting rid of me."
"Well, my God, you remember what happened the day before," she said. "That was quite a shock."
"Yeah," he said, sarcastically. "Sure."
The Corps I - Semper Fi Page 34