"I beg your pardon?"
"Are you armed? Do you have a gun?"
"As a matter of fact, I do. Am I going to need one?"
"Much of that material is top secret, Captain. It either has to be in a secure facility or charged to someone who has the appropriate security clearance and is armed."
"My pistol is stolen," Fleming Pickering said.
"Sir?"
"I brought it home from France in 1919," Pickering said. "It’s stamped ‘U.S. Property.’"
Kramer chuckled and smiled. "I’m sure the Statute of Limitations would apply, Sir. A Colt .45?"
"Yeah," Pickering said He went to a chest of drawers, opened it, and held up a Colt Model 1911 pistol.
"Well, we’ll get you another one, Captain. But that should do for the time being."
"Is there any reason I can’t just read this stuff here and give it all back?"
"None that I can think of, Sir. May I make a suggestion?"
"Sure."
"Make a quick survey, select what you want, and then we’ll send Mr. Satterly back to the office with the rest. For that matter, I could go with him. And then-presuming you find Mrs. Feller at least temporarily satisfactory-she could stay here until you’re finished, then bring the rest back."
"What would Mrs. Feller do about a gun?" Pickering asked dryly.
"She carries one in her purse, Sir."
"I’ll be damned!"
Pickering put the Colt automatic back in the drawer and closed it. Then he examined his tie, straightened it, and shrugged into his uniform jacket.
"Let me help you with your ribbons," Kramer said.
He pinned them on for Pickering, then they went into the sitting room.
"Mrs. Feller," Pickering said, "Commander Kramer speaks very highly of you. If you think it’s worth trying, I’d be grateful if you would come on board to help me."
"If you’re not pleased with how I work out, Captain Pickering," she said, "I’ll understand."
"Well, we’ll give it our best shot," Pickering said. "Mr. Satterly, you want to hand me that briefcase?"
"Aye, aye, Sir," Lieutenant Satterly said. For the first time, Pickering saw that the briefcase was attached to Satterly’s wrist with a length of stainless steel cable and a handcuff.
"Mrs. Feller," Pickering said, "why don’t you call room service and order some coffee?"
"Just for the two of you," Kramer explained. "Ellen, you’ll stay and see what Captain Pickering decides to send back with you to the office."
She nodded. As Pickering dipped into the briefcase, he heard her ask the operator for room service.
A moment or two later, he glanced around for Commander Kramer to ask him a question. Before he found Kramer, however, his eyes went up Ellen Feller’s dress. Quite innocently, he was sure, she was sitting in such a way that he could see that her lingerie was lace and black.
I’ll be damned, a missionary lady who wears black lace underwear and carries a gun in her purse.
"Commander, would you tell me what the hell this is, please?" he said, turning his attention to the business at hand.
(Three)
Headquarters, 2ndJoint Training Force
Camp Elliott, California
1005 Hours 2 February 1942
Offices in Marine headquarters are usually well equipped with signs identifying the various functions performed therein. And often the signs identify the name of the functionary as well. That didn’t seem to be true of Headquarters, 2ndJoint Training Force. There were sign brackets mounted over the doors, but no signs hung from them.
Second Joint Training Force, whatever the hell that was, was either moving in or moving out, Staff Sergeant Joe Howard decided. He was not surprised. The whole Corps seemed to be in a state of upheaval.
Though Staff Sergeant Joe Howard normally took a great deal of professional pride in his appearance, he looked slovenly now, and he knew it. He needed a shave, for one thing, and his greens were mussed and bore the stain of a spilled cup of coffee.
Howard had just flown into San Diego from Pearl Harbor on a Martin PBM-3R Mariner. The Mariner was a "flying boat," a seaplane. Most of the twin-engined, gull-winged aircraft had a crew of seven. They were armed with one .30- and five .50-caliber machine guns and had provision to carry and drop a ton of ordnance, either bombs or depth charges.
The one Howard had flown from Pearl Harbor, however, was the unarmed transport version, the "Dash-Three-R." But this one wasn’t a standard Dash-Three-R. It had been fitted up inside for Navy brass. For admirals or better, Joe judged from the comfortable leather seats, the steward, and even an airborne crapper. There were sixteen passengers aboard, including a rear admiral, a half-dozen Navy captains, three Marine and one Army full colonels, and some lesser brass. And two enlisted men. The other one was a gold-stripe Navy Chief Radioman who had made it plain even before they were taken out to the airplane at Pearl that he was not interested in conversation.
Rank didn’t get you on the Mariner, the priority on your orders did. They left a roomful of brass behind them at Pearl, including a highly pissed Marine lieutenant colonel who had strongly asserted that there was something seriously wrong with a system that made him give up his seat to a lowly staff sergeant.
It had been Joe Howard’s first ride on an airplane of any kind. As a consequence, he had not been aware that aircraft have a tendency to make sudden rapid ascents and descents while proceeding in level flight. The price he paid to gain such an awareness was a nearly full cup of coffee spilled on his chest, soiling his shirt, field scarf, and blouse, and painfully scalding his skin. All this took place while the gold-stripe Chief Radioman watched him scornfully.
A heavyset, middle-aged master gunnery sergeant came down the deserted, signless corridor.
"Gunny, excuse me, I’m looking for Captain Stecker in Special Planning," Staff Sergeant Joe Howard said to him.
The Gunny examined him carefully, critically. There was no way he could miss the stubble on Howard’s face or the brown stains on his field scarf and khaki shirt.
I am now going to get my ass eaten out, and this sonofabitch looks like he’s had a lot of practice.
"You’re Howard, right?" the Gunny said.
"That’s right," Joe said, and then blurted, "They just flew me in from Pearl, Gunny. That’s when I spilled coffee on me."
"Captain Stecker’s the third door on the right, Howard," the Gunny said, turning and pointing. "You bring your records jacket with you?"
"Yeah," Howard said, surprised. An enlisted man’s records were not ordinarily put into his hands when he was transferred. They either found some officer going to the same place and gave them to him, or they sent them by registered mail. But Howard had been handed his along with the set of orders transferring him to 2ndJoint Training Force.
"Good," the Gunny said, and walked down the corridor.
How the hell does he know about my records? Or my name?
Joe went to the third door on the right and knocked.
"Come!"
It was Jack NMI Stecker’s familiar voice. But it was no longer Gunny Stecker, his friend from Benning and Quantico. It was now Captain Jack NMI Stecker.
Joe opened the door, marched in, and reported to Stecker as a Marine sergeant is supposed to report to a Marine captain.