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“I think we must warn our new allies that the enemy is about to attack their vulnerable belly.”

He circled the regions of Georgia, Armenia, and Azerbaijan with great gusto, and added a firm arrow striking into the hinterland of the Soviet Union.

“I agree, Commander, but how can we do that without endangering our secrecy?”

Standing slowly upright, Nobukiyo placed the pencil with great care and eased his back with both hands on his haunches, letting his mind work the problem in silence.

The silence was assaulted by the growing propeller sounds of the huge armada.

Two minutes passed before he leant back on the chart table again, drawing Jinyo back into a soft conversation.

“It can be done… will be done… and all we need is one man prepared to do his duty for the Emperor.”

Dropping his voice to a whisper, he explained his plan.

0356 hrs, Thursday, 11th July 1946, mouth of the Ondusengo River, South-West Africa.

There had been a number of interruptions to the preparations ashore, as Allied coastal command and naval aircraft made numerous appearances, shepherding their charges southwards, on the lookout for anything that might pose a threat.

A Hudson V of the SAAF surprised the shore party in the process of assembling the fuel hoses, but it did not have eyes for the land, and they were not seen.

I-1, and then I-14, had gorged themselves on the fuel secreted there for the U-Boats.

They had no need of the torpedoes and heavy calibre ammunition stored there, at least, not at that time.

Whilst the torpedoes were compatible, the 88mm and 105mm main gun ammunition was not, but all would help with Nobukiyo’s plan.

Whilst not part of the plan, both the Sen-Tokus arrived at the site.

I-401 and her sister submarine did not close to top up their tanks, as soundings indicated that the depth had decreased from that marked on their charts.

However, Nobukiyo did bring his vessel closer to land and risked a quick meeting with the other boat commanders, mainly to advise them of his discovery and beliefs, and discuss any changes to their operational plan.

He also sent one man ashore, charged with a special mission.

The volunteer’s comrades sought and received permission to come on deck.

Smartly lined up, the eight men saluted their comrade and swung softly into the Japanese martial song, Umi Yukaba.

If I go away to the sea, I shall be a corpse washed up. If I go away to the mountain, I shall be a corpse in the grass. But if I die for the Emperor, It will not be a regret.

Ensign Ito Kisokada tried to control his tears, not shed for what he was about to do, but for those who stood in front of him, honouring him with their song.

He failed, and his emotions overcame him when he realised that Nobukiyo and Jinyo were also stood erect, saluting him, and adding their voices to the anthem.

It was the proudest moment of his short life, and he saluted as correctly as he could.

Taking his leave, he made sure his equipment was secured in the small dinghy, and allowed himself to be slipped slowly off the casing and into the water.

His comrades again struck up with Umi Yukaba, bringing his tears back. Digging the paddle into the sea, he moved himself away towards the beach, and his date with destiny.

Forty-eight hours to the precise minute that he had said goodbye to the shore party, and become the only occupant of the beach around the mouth of the Ondusengo River, Ensign Kisokada checked his radio for the hundredth time, confirmed the frequency, and flicked the transmit button.

He sent the message five times as ordered and waited, seemingly for an age, before two overlapping five-letter acknowledgements came back.

His mission discharged, Kisokada switched off the radio and slumped, no longer driven by the need for service, or the mission with which he had been entrusted.

Driving himself out of his temporary melancholy, he grabbed the radio and took it to the rocky promontory, where he placed it next to the reasonably comfortable seat he had constructed out of shell boxes and other stores.

Before he made himself comfy, he took his rank markings, personal effects, and his identification tag, consigning them all to the weighted bag he had been given for the purpose, strode into the water, and hurled the bag as far as he could into the flowing waters of the Ondusengo.

Returning to his seat, he examined the crystal clear starry display, and his mind drifted to his home village, where he would often gaze at the night sky.

He poured a healthy measure of the German brandy for himself, and lit one of the cigarettes that had been liberated from the German stockpile.

Life was good, and Ensign Ito Kisokada was now at peace and soaked up the cold breeze coming in from the dark sea.

He flicked his lighter one more time and used the light to apply the pliers just as he had been shown.

Twice he squeezed the tool before settling back again to savour his pleasures.

The Asbach brandy and rich smoke stole his senses.

He smiled at the images he conjured up; his ancestors images, those of his wife and daughter, and of his comrades, both dead and alive.

The two British-made pencil fuses silently did their work, the cupric chloride eating through the retaining wire, which, when destroyed, would release the striker that impacted the percussion cap.

The No 10 Pencil fuse performed its allotted task with great efficiency and, only seven seconds over the ten minute setting, ensured that the stars were surpassed in their brilliance, if only for the briefest of moments, as the former U-Boat replenishment point evaporated in fire and light.

As per Nobukiyo’s plan, nothing of note was left, least of all a recognisable Japanese radio set.

Kisokada’s body travelled in all directions, none of which pieces were recognisable as human, let alone as one of the Emperor’s subjects.

In a few days, his stripped bones were simply unremarkable additions to the thousands of remnants already blanched by the sun all along the Skeleton coast.

Kisokada’s transmissions had been received in Groblershoop, South Africa, and in Mbour, Senegal, from where communist sympathisers ensured that the important message was forwarded down the line of communications to their political masters in Moscow.

The arrival of Nobukiyo’s information caused consternation in the Soviet ranks, and Red Army forces in the Caucasus were immediately put on alert.

Sympathetic observers on the Cape also added their own information, which did everything to confirm the radio reports that originated from God knew where.

Combined with the reappearance of Montgomery, the presence of a huge troop-carrying fleet suggested exactly that which the Japanese submarine commander had suspected. What had been suspected as a ruse previously now clearly had ‘meat on the bone’, forcing the GKO to make dispositions in response.

In turn, the loss of some assets changed a few of Vasilevsky’s plans, although he persuaded Stalin and his cronies to enable the movement of some ex-POW units to the new theatre, dispatching the equivalent of one full field army to the southern front within hours of receiving the news.

No sooner had that decision been made than a high-level report from still friendly Japanese assets indicated a mass sailing of vessels that could suggest a seaborne invasion somewhere on the Pacific coast of the Motherland.

Combined with the noted increase in air raid frequency in Siberia and all points east, the possibility was difficult to ignore.

In fact, impossible.

Some more NKVD units were stripped from interior duties, resulting in an increased severity and savagery from those who remained behind, anxious to prevent any further rumblings of discontent amongst the various states of the Union.