on the public-address system control panel mounted on the bulkhead.
“Attention all hands. This is the captain speaking,” he announced. He knew that within seconds he would have the attention of every man aboard.
On being given command of the Mansfield, he had received advice from both his father and grandfather. In addition to a good deal else, they had both told him to stay the hell off the PA system unless he had something important to say.
“Don’t fall in love with the sound of your own voice,” Vice Admiral Charles L. Matthews, USN, Ret., his grandfather, had told him. “Remember the little kid who kept crying ‘wolf.’ ”
Rear Admiral C. L. Matthews, Jr., his father, had put much the same thought this way: “Stay off the squawk box, Lew, unless you have something really important to say. When you say ‘This is the captain speaking,’ you want everybody to pay attention, not groan and say, ‘Jesus Christ, again?’ ”
Lew Matthews had taken that advice, and right now was glad he had.
“We’re about to pull alongside the Badoeng Strait,” Captain Lew Matthews announced. “We are going to make an underway transfer of two officers from Badoeng Strait. One of them is a physician. The other is a Marine pilot who was shot down right after this war started, and has been behind the enemy’s lines until his rescue yesterday. Once we have them aboard, we will make for Pusan at best speed, where a hospital plane will be waiting to fly the Marine to the hospital at Sasebo. Do this right. The one thing this Marine doesn’t need after all he’s gone through is to take a bath in the Sea of Japan.”
He let go of the ANNOUNCE lever and walked to the spray-soaked window of the bridge, took a look at the seas and the gray bulk of the Badoeng Strait dead ahead, and shook his head.
He turned and caught the attention of the officer of the deck, then pointed to himself.
“The captain has the conn!” the officer of the deck announced.
“Bring us alongside the Badoeng Strait,” Matthews ordered the helmsman, describing with his finger how he wanted the Mansfield to move and where.
He turned to the officer of the deck and nodded.
The officer of the deck went to the control panel, depressed the ANNOUNCE lever, and said, “Attention all hands. Make all preparations for underway personnel transfer.”
[THREE]
USS BADOENG STRAIT (CVE -116) 37.54 DEGREES NORTH LATITUDE 130.05 DEGREES EAST LONGITUDE THE SEA OF JAPAN 1515 16 OCTOBER 1950
Lieutenant Bruce D. Patterson, MC, USNR, wearing foul-weather gear and an inflated life jacket, was sitting in a bosun’s chair. The chair—an item of Navy gear evolved from a sort of canvas seat that hauled sailors aloft to work on masts and sails, and thus was probably as old as the anchor—was suspended under a cable that had been rigged between one of the higher decks of the USS Mansfield and an interior strong point in the USS Badoeng Strait that was accessible through a square port in her side.
“All things considered, Major Pickering,” Lieutenant Patterson said, “I very much regret ever having met you.”
Major Malcolm S. Pickering, USMCR, who was also wearing foul-weather gear and an inflated life jacket, and was strapped into a second bosun’s chair, smiled, shrugged, held out both hands in front of him, and said, “Jeez, Doc, I thought you liked me.”
There was laughter from the dozen Marine aviators who were on hand to watch Good Ol’ Pick get transferred to the destroyer.
Another Marine aviator in a flight suit walked up to them.
“I don’t suppose it occurred to any of you guys that you might be in the way down here,” Lieutenant Colonel William C. Dunn, USMC, said.
Lieutenant Colonel Dunn was not in a very good mood. He had just finished what he considered the most unpleasant duty laid upon a commanding officer.
And it was still painfully fresh in his mind:
USS BADOENG STRAIT (CVE - 116) MARINE AIR GROUP 33 A T SEA
16 October 1950
MRS. BARBARA C. MITCHELL
APARTMENT 12-D, “OCEANVIEW”
1005 OCEAN DRIVE
SAN DIEGO, CALIFORNIA
DEAR BABS:
BY NOW, I’M SURE THAT YOU HAVE BEEN OFFICIALLY NOTIFIED OF DICK’S DEATH. I THOUGHT THAT YOU WOULD BE INTERESTED IN WHAT I CAN TELL YOU OF WHAT HAPPENED.
WE WERE IN A SIX-CORSAIR FLIGHT OVER NORTH KOREA, NEAR HUNGNAM, ON THE EAST COAST OF THE KOREAN PENINSULA. OUR MISSION WAS IN SUPPORT OF THE I REPUBLIC OF KOREA CORPS, WHICH IS IN PURSUIT OF RETREATING NORTH KOREAN ARMY FORCES.