Our relief was to be the Cuttlefish, one of the first fleet boats, antedating even the Shark and Tarpon, and notable primarily for her slow speed. The three extra days of waiting seemed particularly long to live through, and I remember strongly resenting the fact that we had to wait while she touched at Dutch Harbor for a briefing, just as we had.
During the third day we edged over to the limit of our area, the closest point toward Pearl, and waited impatiently. When the notification arrived that Cuttlefish had at last arrived off Kiska, we were, within minutes, going south at full speed.
But the patrol had one good thing to be said for it: Almost from our departure from Pearl, I realized that Jim had changed at last. He seemed entirely his old relaxed self, and his support during the trying thirty days of inactivity off Kiska was heartening. I could sense it, almost touch the Difference, and that contemplative awareness was gone.
This time there was no avoiding Midway. All of us could testify, after three weeks among the sand dunes, that even the gooney birds looked human.
As we completed the refit and prepared for our third patrol, new faces for the first time began to appear among our crew.
A rotation policy had been set UP whereby certain numbers of every crew were to be left ashore after each war patrol, with the looked-for result that the entire crew of men and officers would have been rotated after a reasonable number of patrol runs. Lobo Smith was gone, and so was Wilson, our Chief in Charge of the engine rooms. Tom had protested at losing his right bower, as he put it, but the needs of new construction back in the States took priority. A first-class Motor Machinist's Mate named Kiser was promoted into Wilson's shoes and Jim, after some inquiry, found the means to make him a Chief Petty Officer so that he could have the added rank and prestige to go with his new responsibilities.
Our officer complement remained the same, however, except that a new Ensign was ordered to us, and everybody except Jim and rue received a promotion. Tom became a full Lieutenant; so did Keith. Hugh and Dave found their names in a promotion AlNav to the rank of Lieutenant, junior Grade.
Our new wardroom occupant was jerry Cohen, fresh out of the submarine school and as green as grass. Though he had been sent to us for training, so said the ComSubPac Personnel Officer, it was obvious that he had to have a job and a battle station, and that some revision in our setup was therefore necessary.
Jim, Keith, and Tom, of course, stayed in their depart- ments as before. Jerry Cohen, a short, slightly built lad, became assistant to Keith in the gunnery and torpedo depart- ment and took over Dave Freeman's chores with the commissary department. He also relieved Hugh on the navigational plot in the conning tower at battle stations, freeing that young man for direct help to Tom Schultz during such times.
We had two day of training, "refresher training" it was called-and then for two days- more we loaded, fueled, and, — provisioned the ship. On the eighteenth day after arriving at Midway from our second war patrol Walrus got under way for her third, bound this time for Palau and the area between R and New Guinea. As a matter of curiosity I had looked into the situation off the Bungo Suido, partly to see what Stocker' had rtm into while there, and had — found ample evidence Bungo Pete's continuing effectiveness. The Nerka, somehow, had not met with him at all. Perhaps he had been otherwise occupied or under overhaul. But the next submarine in AREA SEVEN had been horribly knocked about and had to return to Midway for emergency repairs. And Turbot, the next one after that, had not been heard from for a long time and became one day overdue from patrol at the time of our own departure from Midway.
After the Aleutians, Palau was a pleasure cruise, warm an balmy, most of the nights star-lighted, the sea smooth.
Except for one thing: where our Aleutian patrol had been notable for lack of activity, Palau gave us all we could handle, and then some, nor did it wait for our arrival.
We ran all the way to Palau on the surface, except for one day spent submerged in the vicinity of Guam so as not to be detected by planes flying patrol from there. We crossed our area boundary at midnight, were speeding southwest in hopes of getting in sight of the main island, Babelthuap, before submerging for the day, when Jim called me to the bridge.
I was up there within seconds. He had slowed down and we were swinging to the northward.
"There's a ship, Captain!" He pointed to the southern horizon. I had taken the precaution of keeping red goggles on whenever I went below at night, even when lying down for a few minutes' doze on my bunk. Hence I could see the object he was pointing out almost right away. It was a small vessel, short and stubby, with a lot of top hamper and a single tall thin stack. A small freighter, alone and unprotected "Call the crew to battle stations torpedo, Jim," I ordered.
He dashed below eagerly. A second later the musical chimes of the general alarm rang forth, and the scurrying of feet told me that Walrus was girding her loins for action. Tom came to the bridge, relieved Keith of the deck; the latter ran below to his TDC. On night surface action Tom had nothing to do unless we dived, hence we had decided that he would relieve whoever happened to have deck at the time, and back me up on the bridge as QOD.
This indeed seemed a good opportunity to try the night surface attack technique. Our SJ radar had been worked over and much improved during our last refit, and a talk-back circuit had been rigged up between the conning tower and the bridge so that I no longer had the nuisance of trying to shout down through the open hatch or of relaying orders and in- formation by messenger or through the bridge speaker. Word would come up from Jim via the general announcing speaker, as before. In a moment it blared: "Bridge, conn testing!" I picked up my mike: "Loud and clear, conn; how me?"
Jim's steady voice came back in reply: "I hear you the same!"
A few seconds later Jim again: "Bridge, the ship is at battle stations. No range yet to the target."
We were still too far for radar to get a return echo from the target. "Give him eight thousand yards," I called back.
"Angle on the bow looks like starboard, about broadside, give him starboard ninety! Stand by for a TBT bearing." So saying, I jammed my binoculars into their socket on top of the instrument, twisted it around until the other ship loomed in the center of their field, and pressed the button. In the conning tower the relative bearing would appear on a dial repeater near the TDC, could be set into it exactly as a periscope bearing might. Similarly, Jerry Cohen would set it up on his plotting sheet.
Without radar ranges, a few bearings alone would give us an idea of the enemy's course and speed. If two of them could be paralleled by accurate ranges, we would have a definite solution, the essential information necessary for accurately angling our torpedoes.
The objective, of course, was to get the enemy's course and speed quickly, run in close and finish him off before I spotted the submarine or had other opportunity for escape.
We were still making slow progress on our new course, to the north. To get a radar range it would be necessary to approach a little closer. "Jim, I'm going to change course toward the target to get within radar range," I called down, and directed.
Oregon to put the rudder full left, calling for more speed as I did so.
Snorting from her four aroused diesels, Walrus wheeled in the smooth water toward the enemy ship and began to close the range at an oblique angle.
"Radar contact!" The speaker blared beside me. Then steady voice. "We have him on the radar, Captain. Range six thousand. Give us a bearing!"