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W E B Griffin - Corp 03 - Counterattack Page 2


  But Master Gunnery Sergeant Stecker was more than just im-pressive. Best of all, he got Corporal Howard out of Parris Is-land. A couple of days before they left Fort Benning, Stecker called him in and asked him what he thought of the M-l Garand.

  It was almost holy writ in the Corps that the finest, most accu-rate rifle ever made was the `03 Springfield. Even among the ex-pert riflemen who had fired the Garand at Benning, the weapon was known as a Mickey Mouse piece the Army had dreamed up; it would never come close to being as good a rifle as the `03.

  But Joe Howard had come to believe that the Garand was a fine weapon even off the shelf, and that with some fine-tuning by an armorer it would be capable of greater accuracy than the `03. He told Gunny Stecker just that.

  "That makes it you and me against the Marine Corps, son," Gunny Stecker replied. "You happy at Parris Island?"

  Joe told him the truth about that, too: he didn't like what was generally considered to be a great berth for a brand-new, very young corporal-as opposed, say, to being in a Marine detach-ment on a man-of-war, or in a line company in a regiment some-where-and he had been trying to get out of it.

  "Would you be interested in coming to Quantico and working on the Garand? The basic detail would be teaching riflery to kids in the Basic Officer Course, and college kids who come for train-ing in the summer. But when you're not doing that, there would be time to work on the Garand."

  "I'd love it, Gunny," Joe replied. "But they won't let me go from Parris Island."

  "Why not?"

  Joe told him about his getting sent there by the Major General Commandant.

  "I'll see what I can do," Stecker said.

  Two weeks after he reported back into Parris Island, Joe was put on orders to U.S. Marine Corps Schools, Quantico, Virginia.

  The next year was good duty. Aside from maybe once a month catching Corporal of the Guard, and maybe once every I other month catching Junior Charge of Quarters at Headquarters, Marine Corps Schools, Joe Howard was subject to no other details.

  He was either teaching brand-new officers how to fire the `03, which he liked, or running people through the Annual Rifle Fir-ing; but that didn't take all that much time. There was plenty of time to see what could be done with the Garand.

  Putting several thousand rounds through M-1s taught him what was basically wrong with the weapon, and how to fix it.

  The primary problem was the barrel. When it was heated up by firing, it expanded and jammed into the stock. The result was that in rapid fire the later rounds through it (the twentieth, say) would strike a couple of inches-sometimes much more-from where the first round had struck.

  The fix for that was to make the barrel free-floating. You had to carefully whittle wood away from the inside of the stock so that the barrel didn't get bent by the stock when it heated up.

  The sights left a little to be desired, too. Joe learned to fix that by machining from scratch a new rear sight aperture, or "peep sight hole," that was smaller than the original, and by taking a couple of thousandths of an inch off the front sight. He also did some work on the gears that moved the rear sight horizon-tally and vertically, smoothing them out, making them more precise. And he tinkered with the trigger group, smoothing the sear so the let-off could be better controlled, and with the action itself, smoothing it to improve functioning. In the process, he learned where and how much lubricant was required. Finally, he mated barrels which had demonstrated unusual accuracy to his specially worked-over actions and trigger groups.

  There were soon a half-dozen M-1s in the Arms Room just as accurate as any Star Gauge Springfield. One of these was in-formally reserved for Corporal Howard, and one other for Mas-ter Gunnery Sergeant Jack NMI Stecker.

  Joe Howard made a nice little piece of change that year proving to visiting riflemen during informal sessions on the range that the M-l Garand wasn't really the Mickey Mouse Army piece of shit everybody said it was.

  And three times Gunny Stecker had handed him money- once ninety dollars-which the Gunny said was his fair share of what he had taken away from visiting master gunnery ser-geants and sergeants major who also had an unfounded faith in the all-around superiority of the Springfield, and who were fool-ish enough to put their money where their mouths were. A Ga-rand fine-tuned by Corporal Joe Howard, in the hands of a marksman like Gunny Stecker, was hard to beat.

  In the late summer of 1940, after France had fallen to the Ger-mans and Congress had authorized the first of what were to be many expansions of the Corps, there were a flock of promo-tions-promotions that came to many men long before they thought they had any chance of getting them. Joe Howard be-came a sergeant then. Six months later, a veteran ordnance ser-geant assigned to the just-formed 1st Defense Battalion at the Navy Base at Pearl Harbor, Territory of Hawaii, became termi-nally ill. Soon afterward, someone in personnel remembered that Master Gunnery Sergeant Jack NMI Stecker at Quantico had a really bright and competent ordnance buck sergeant working for him.

  That the kid had worked for Gunny Stecker for two years, and been promoted during that time, was all-around recommen-dation enough; people who didn't measure up to Gunny Stecker's high standards didn't get promoted, they got themselves shipped someplace else. On the same order that Headquarters U.S. Marine Corps ordered Sergeant Joseph L. Howard to the 1st Defense Battalion at Pearl, it promoted him to staff sergeant.

  When the Japanese attack began, even as he listened to the sound of exploding bombs and the roar of low-flying aircraft, it was very difficult for Joe Howard to accept that what was hap-pening actually was happening.

  He had been conditioned to regard Pearl Harbor as America's mighty-and impregnable-fortress in the Pacific. In his view, if war came, the Japanese would probably attack Wake Island and Guam, and some of the other islands, and maybe even (Joe thought this highly unlikely) the Philippines. But Hawaii? Never. Not with Pearl Harbor and its row of dreadnought bat-tleships, and its cruisers and aircraft carriers. And with the Army Air Corps fighters and bombers, not to mention the Navy and Marine Corps fighters and torpedo bombers afloat and ashore.

  No goddamn way!

  If the Japs were really stupid enough to try, say, invading Guam, Pearl would be the fortress from which the mightiest naval force the world had ever known would sail (carrying a Ma-rine landing force aboard, of course) to bloody the Japs' noses and send the little bastards back to their rice paddies and raw fish with a lesson they wouldn't soon forget.

  But, incredibly, when he looked out his barracks window, there was smoke rising from Battleship Row, and the sound of heavy explosions, and the same thing over at the seaplane base. And finally, when he saw a dozen Japanese aircraft in perfect formation-four three-plane vees-making low-level torpedo and strafing runs against Battleship Row, he realized that the impossible was indeed happening.

  He couldn't do a goddamned thing to help the battleships, but he damned sure could do something at the seaplane hangars, where there were Marine-manned.50-caliber water-cooled Browning machine guns on antiaircraft mounts.

  Because access to ammunition and the fully automatic weap-ons was limited to commissioned officers, he wasn't supposed to have a key to the arms locker, but he did; he was a good Ma-rine Sergeant and knew which regulations should be violated. He went to the ammo locker and opened it up. By the time the first Marines came for ammo for the.50s, and to draw Browning Automatic Rifles and air-cooled.30-caliber Browning machine guns, and ammo for them, he was ready for them-long before the first officer showed up.

  When an officer finally came and saw that most of the weap-ons and ammo had already been issued, he didn't ask any ques-tions about how come the locker was open. Joe Howard didn't think that he would.

  With nothing to do at the ammo locker, the officer went off to make himself useful somewhere else. That left Joe there alone with nothing to do either. After thinking about it a moment, he decided he couldn't just sit this goddamned attack out in an ammo bunker; so he took the last BAR and eight twenty-round magazin
es for it and ran outside.

  A Ford ton-and-a-half truck came racing up with a buck ser-geant driving and a PFC in the cab beside him.

  "Have you got any belted fifty?" the buck sergeant demanded. "I can't get in our goddamned locker!"

  "Come on!" Joe said, turning back toward the locker to show him where it was.

  And then he looked over his shoulder to see if the sergeant was following him.

  The sergeant was still sitting behind the wheel, but the top of his head was gone, and the windshield and the inside of the truck were smeared with a mass of blood and brain tissue.

  Staff Sergeant Howard threw up.

  Then he ran to the truck, grabbed the handle, pulled the door open, and dragged the buck sergeant's body out onto the ground. Blood spurted from somewhere and soaked Joe Howard's T-shirt and trousers.

  After that he looked into the truck cab. The PFC was slumped in the seat, his head wedged back against the cushion, his eyes wide open but unseeing, his chest ripped open, blood streaming from the wound.

  Joe Howard leaned against the truck fender and threw up again and again, until there was nothing in his stomach and all that came was a foul green bile.

  And then he went back into the arms locker and huddled be-hind the counter, shaking, curled up, with his arms around his knees. He stayed there for he didn't know how long, except that when he finally came out, the attack was over, and the Ford ton-and-a-half had somehow caught on fire and burned, and the PFC inside was nothing but a charred lump of dead meat.

  (Two)

  Oahu Island, Territory of Hawaii

  0845 Hours 7 December 1941

  Technical Sergeant Charles M. Galloway, USMC, a good-looking, sum, deeply tanned, and brown-haired young man of twenty-five, lay naked on his back, his head propped up with pillows, in a somewhat battered but sturdy and comfortable bed in one of the two bedrooms of a hunting lodge in the mountains.

  He had a Chesterfield cigarette in one hand. The other hand was wrapped around a large glass of pineapple juice, liberally laced with Gordon's London Dry Gin.

  Ensign Mary Agnes O'Malley, Nurse Corps, USN, a slim, five-foot-four-inch, red-haired, pert-breasted woman, similarly undressed, knelt on the bed, about to begin another game of what she called "ice cream cone." This involved the dribbling of creme de cacao on certain portions of the body, and then re-moving it with the tongue. Until the previous day, Charley Gal-loway had never heard of-or even, in his sometimes wild fantasies, thought about-the kind of thing she was doing; but he was learning to like it.

  The other bedroom of the hunting lodge, which was actually a simple, tin-roofed frame cabin, was occupied by Technical Ser-geant Stefan "Big Steve" Oblensky, USMC, and Lieutenant Florence Kocharski, Nurse Corps, USN.

  Big Steve, who was Polish and in his forties, was a great bull of a man. But Lieutenant Kocharski was big enough to be a match for him, which is to say that she was Valkyrie-like, in her late thirties, and also Polish. Several months before, she'd been attracted to Big Steve when she'd met him at the Naval Hospital at Pearl Harbor. He'd come in for his annual physical examina-tion, and the examination had kind of expanded and become more physical.

  And vice versa. So strongly that the two of them had chosen to ignore the cultural and, more important, the legal prohibition against socialization between commissioned and enlisted mem-bers of the Naval Service.

  Florence Kocharski was a full lieutenant, about to make lieu-tenant commander; Big Steve expected to make master sergeant any day. Both of them had been around the service long enough to know about keeping indiscretions a hundred miles from the flagpole. A hundred miles was an impossibility on Oahu, but a hunting cabin in the hills was a reasonable approximation. (It was owned by an old pal of Big Steve's who had retired and gone to work for Dole.)

  But to get to the cabin required an automobile. Lieutenant Florence Kocharski didn't have one, and Big Steve Oblensky was six months away from getting his driver's license back, after having been caught driving drunk. But not to worry: T/Sgt. Charley Galloway had a lovingly maintained yellow 1933 Ford V-8 convertible. Big Steve had been able to borrow Charley's car without any trouble the first time. He and Charley both knew that Big Steve would return the favor somewhere down the pike.

  But the second weekend Big Steve asked to borrow the Ford,

  he had to tell Charley why he wanted it. And Charley Galloway asked if Big Steve's nurse had a friend.

  "Jesus Christ, Charley! I can't ask her nothing like that! Be a pal."

  "You ask her, she says no, then I'll be a pal. But you ask her."

  To Big Steve's surprise, Flo Kocharski was neither outraged nor astonished when, with remarkable delicacy, Big Steve brought the subject up.

  Ensign Mary Agnes O'Malley, Lieutenant Kocharski's room-mate, had already noticed T/Sgt. Charles Galloway at the wheel of his yellow Ford convertible and asked her about him. She'd asked specifically about how he came to have pilot's wings. En-sign O'Malley had just recently entered the Navy and had not known that enlisted men could be pilots.

  There was a small corps of enlisted pilots, Lieutenant Kochar-ski explained to her. These were officially called Naval Aviation Pilots, but more commonly "flying sergeants." T/Sgt. Charles Galloway was one of them. He was a fighter pilot of VMF-211, where her Stefan was the NCO in charge of Aircraft Mainte-nance.

  "He's darling," Ensign O'Malley replied.

  Lieutenant Kocharski didn't think "darling" was the right word, but Charley Galloway was a good-looking kid, and she was not surprised that Mary Agnes O'Malley found him attrac-tive.

  Lieutenant Kocharski ended the conversation on that particu-lar note-to protect young Sergeant Galloway from Ensign O'Malley. Ensign O'Malley was not a bright-eyed innocent. She had entered the Navy late, at thirty-three, rather than right out of nursing school, which was usually the case. Florence, natu-rally curious, had in time wormed her history out of her.

  Before she joined the Navy, Ensign Mary Agnes O'Malley had been a nun, a nursing sister of the Sisters of Mercy. She had become a postulant in the order at sixteen. And she had served faithfully and well for many years after that. First she became a registered nurse, and later she qualified as both an operating-room nurse and a nurse anesthesiologist. Later still, she was se-duced by a married anesthesiologist, an M.D., while taking an advanced course at Massachusetts General Hospital.

  She didn't blame the doctor, Mary Agnes told Florence. She had not been wearing her Sisters of Mercy habit at Mass Gen-eral, and she had not told the doctor, ever, that she was a nun.

  But once she had tasted the forbidden fruit, she realized that she could no longer adhere to a vow of chastity, and petitioned the Vatican for release from her vows.

  The Navy was then actively recruiting nurses, and she was highly qualified, so she signed on.

  In the four months she had known her, Flo had come to un-derstand that beneath Mary Agnes O'Malley's demure and modest facade, there lurked a predator with the morals of an alley cat. Mary Agnes frankly admitted, in confidence, that she was making up for lost time.

  So when Big Steve came to her about Charley Galloway, Flo Kocharski felt a certain uneasiness about turning Mary Agnes loose on him. Charley was a really nice kid. On the other hand, if he hadn't leaned on Stefan to get himself fixed up as the price of borrowing his car, she wouldn't have had to.

  What neither Flo nor Big Steve knew, or even remotely sus-pected, was that Charley Galloway was far less experienced in relations between the sexes than anyone who knew him would have suspected. During their first night together in the cabin, Mary Alice quickly and delightfully learned that Charley was the antithesis of jaded. Yet not even she suspected that the first time in his twenty-five years Charley had spent the whole night with a woman was that very same night.

  Charley's sexual drives-and sometimes he thought he was cursed with an overgenerous issue of them-were flagrantly het-erosexual. Neither was he troubled with any religious or moral restraints. His fantasies wer
e about equally divided between the normal-meeting a well-stacked nymphomaniac whose father owned a liquor store-and meeting a nice, respectable girl and getting married.

  He had encountered neither in his eight years in the Corps.

  And there was something else: he didn't want to fuck up. The price would be too high. The most important thing in the world, during his first few years in the Corps, had been to work his way up to the point where the Corps would send him to Pensacola and teach him how to fly.

  Catching a dose of the clap, or maybe just getting hauled in by the military police in one of their random raids on a whore-house, would have kept him from getting promoted and getting sent to flight school. And once he'd made staff sergeant and won a berth at Pensacola and then his wings, just about the same re-strictions had applied.