"What about the other thing, his being a Communist?"
"He didn't talk politics," McCoy said. "And I could hardly ask him."
"So what happens now?"
"I call Captain Sessions and tell him," McCoy said.
"I mean, to you?"
"In a couple of days, maybe a week, I think they'll transfer me," McCoy said.
He turned off the highway through the gates of the San Diego Yacht Club and drove to the water's edge.
A Pontiac coupe with Missouri license plates was parked with its nose against the Pier Four sign. There was a Marine officer, in greens, sitting behind the wheel, and Ernie could see the back of Dorothy Burnes's head.
"Oh, good," Ernie said. "They're here."
" 'Oh, good,'" Ken McCoy parroted, "who's here?"
Oh, my God! I should have told him before we got here!
"We have houseguests," Ernie said, as she opened the door of the LaSalle and got out.
The door of the Pontiac opened and Dorothy Burnes, grunting, pushed herself out of the car. She smiled warmly and gratefully at Ernie. Her husband got. out from behind the wheel, looking a little uneasy.
Then he saluted. Ernie wondered why he had done that, and then realized he was returning Ken's salute. And then she understood why. There were silver bars on Martin J. Burnes's epaulets; he outranked Ken, and Ken had saluted him.
"Well, I see you found each other all right," Ernie said. She turned and saw Ken walking up. "This is Ken," she said. "Ken, this is Marty Burnes."
"How do you do, sir," Ken McCoy said formally. Ernie did not like the look on Ken McCoy's face.
"And this is Dorothy," Ernie plunged ahead.
"Hi," Dorothy said.
"Dorothy and I are old pals, and she's having a hard time finding a place to stay, so they'll be staying with us for a couple of days."
"I hope we're not going to put you out too much," Marty Burnes said to McCoy.
"It's her boat," Ken said simply.
Oh, God! He doesn't like this at all. Why not? What's wrong with him? He could easily be in Marty Burnes's place. And then she understood. He's not here as just one more lieutenant; he's going to spy on that Colonel Whatsisname, and he's afraid that the Burneses being on the boat will get in the way of that. And, damnit, maybe he's right.
"Well, let's go aboard," Ernie said, trying to be bright and cheerful. "Dorothy and I have spent the afternoon making hors d'oeuvres."
"And then there'll be steaks," Dorothy chimed in.
"And I'm sure you both could use a drink," Ernie said. She stole a glance at Ken. His eyes were cold. But not angry, she thought. Disappointed, resigned, as if he had expected her to do something dumb like this.
McCoy forced a polite smile on his face.
"I could use a drink," he said. "After you, Lieutenant."
"Can't we forget the Marine Corps?" Ernie said. "Just for an hour or two? What I mean is can't you two use your names?"
"Sure," Marty Burnes said. He smiled and put out his hand to McCoy. "I'm Marty."
McCoy took the hand and forced another brief smile. "Ken," he said.
"You two unload the cars," Ernie ordered. "By the time you're finished, we'll have drinks made."
When the drinks were made, Ernie proposed a toast. "I think, for the Burneses, that this is the proverbial any old port in a storm," she said. "Welcome aboard, Burneses."
McCoy chuckled and raised his glass, and this time his smile was genuine.
"Welcome aboard," he said.
He sat slumped in the largest of the four upholstered chairs in the cabin. He was still in dungarees with his rough-side-out field shoes stretched out in front of him. And for the first time (probably because Marty Burnes was in a green uniform, she thought) she noticed how incongruous a Marine dressed that way looked in the plush cabin.
Ernie and Dorothy passed the tray of hors d'oeuvres. McCoy helped himself to several chunks of cheddar, and then gulped down his drink.
"Now that I am refueled," he said, "I think I'll scrape off some of the barnacles."
He went down the passageway to the master cabin.
In a minute, they could hear the shower start, and a moment after that, faintly, the sound of McCoy singing.
Thank God, he's over the mad.
"He does that, too," Dorothy Burnes said, nodding fondly at her husband.
Ernie made Marty Burnes another drink.
When the sound of the shower stopped and McCoy did not appear in a reasonable time, she excused herself and went to their cabin.
If there's going to be a fight, I might as well get it over with.
She got to the cabin as Ken, naked, lay back on the bed with the telephone in his hand.
He looked at her but said nothing, and he did not react to the way she raised her eyebrows approvingly at his nakedness.
"Collect for anyone, operator, from Lieutenant McCoy to Liberty seven, oh nine five six in Washington, D.C. I'll hold."
"Ken, she had no place to stay. He was going to send her home," Ernie said.
He held the telephone away from his head as if to explain why he couldn't talk to her, and then he put it back. Although she knew that it was not his intention, Ernie chose to interpret the gesture as an invitation to lie down beside him and listen to the conversation. For a moment he stiffened, and she was afraid he would roll away from her, or get up. But then he relaxed.
"Liberty seven, oh nine five six," a none-too-friendly male voice came on the line.
"I have a collect call for anyone from a Lieutenant McCoy," the operator said. "Will you accept charges?"
"We'll accept," the male voice said.
"Go ahead, sir," the operator said. "Your party is on the line."
"How are you, Sergeant?" McCoy said to the telephone. "Is Captain Sessions around?"
"I'll buzz for him. I know he wants to talk to you. How's things in the boondocks?"
"I'm looking for a sergeant who knows how to take a 'Seventeen A-Four apart," McCoy said.
The sergeant chuckled, and then another voice came on the line.
"Captain Sessions."
"Lieutenant McCoy is on the line, sir," the sergeant said.
"Oh, good. Ken?"
"Yes, sir."
"I was about to call you. I was going to wait until I was sure you were home. What's on your mind?"
"Colonel Carlson looked me up today," McCoy said. "I was on the machine-gun range, and he found me there."
"And?"
"He checked to see if I really speak Cantonese, and then pumped me for what he could get."
"What did he get?"
"He wanted to know what I thought of the Mao Tse-tung tribe of slopeheads," McCoy said. "So I told him what he wanted to hear."
"Anything about the Raiders?"
" 'Raiders'? Is that what they're going to call them?"
"Yeah, it looks that way. The Commandant is going to order the formation as of four February, of the Second Separate Battalion, there at Elliott. The same day, a reinforced company-about two hundred fifty people-is going to be transferred from the First Separate Battalion at Quantico to the Second at Elliott. Our friend Zimmerman, who is now a gunnery sergeant, will be one of them. On nineteen February, the Second will be redesignated as the Second Raider Battalion. That's one of the reasons I wanted to talk to you, to tell you that."
"Maybe you better not spread this around, sir," McCoy said. "But I think he's got a good idea."
"He talked to you about it?"
"Yes, sir. And what he said made sense."
"Did he say anything about you joining up? The reason I ask, is that unless you can get into the Second Battalion out there, Colonel Rickabee's going to transfer you back to Quantico, assign you to the First Separate Battalion, and then send you back out to Carlson when they transfer the company from the First Battalion out there."
"He gave me the usual bullshit about comparing me against other volunteers, but I would be damned surprised if he didn't have me transferred."
"Good. Then we'll leave it that way. If you're wrong, if he doesn't pick you… any suggestion that he questioned your neatly doctored service record?"