of the U.S. .30 caliber) would sometimes penetrate the sides of a Higgins boat and that heavy machine guns (the Japanese rough equivalent of the U.S. .50 caliber) almost always would do so.
With the result that if the projectiles did not immediately encounter a body inside the boat, they would often ricochet around the interior until they did.
To take his mind off that unpleasant probability for himself and his men, Captain Dunwood called to mind again the face of that candy-ass “Marine” captain who’d dislocated his finger, and was at that very moment probably having a predinner cocktail with his wife, the general’s daughter, in the O Club at Sasebo. The sonofabitch had probably heard there were some real Marines on the base and been smart enough to make himself scarce while they were there.
Lieutenant John X. McNear, USNR, waved Dunwood onto the bridge.
“My orders are pretty open,” McNear volunteered. “ ‘The hours of darkness’ is a pretty vague term. I was thinking I’d wait until about 2100 and then start edging over.”
“I was wondering,” Dunwood said, as he helped himself to coffee.
“I’m supposed to check in with ComNavForce—the Mount McKinley—when I leave here. I expect that I’d hear from them soon enough if they thought I should have left earlier.”
“I’m sure you would,” Dunwood replied.
“Bridge, Radio,” the intercom metallically announced.
McNear pressed the lever beside his chair.
“Go, Sparks,” he said.
"Skipper, I’m getting an Urgent from ComNavForce.”
“Well, then, when you have it typed up and logged in, why don’t you bring it to the bridge?” McNear said, and turned to Dunwood. “See, I told you.”
Two minutes later, the radio operator, a nineteen-year-old in blue dungarees, came onto the bridge and handed McNear a sheet of typewriter paper.
McNear read it and handed it to Dunwood.
SECRET
URGENT
1530 13 SEP 1950 FROM COMNAVFORCE
TO LST-450
REFERENCE OPS ORDER 12-222
PARA III B 6. IS CHANGED TO READ AS FOLLOWS:
LST-450 WILL DROP ANCHOR AT POSITION 23-23 NLT 0400 15 SEPTEMBER 1950 AND RENDEZVOUS WITH LANDING CRAFT FROM USS PICKAWAY.
REMAINER OF ORIGINAL PARA III B 6 IS DELETED AS IS ALL OF PARA III B-7.
FURTHER AMENDMENTS TO FOLLOW.
END
SECRET
“What’s it mean?” Captain Dunwood asked.
“You saw where it said the fifteenth?” McNear asked. Dunwood nodded.
“It used to read the fourteenth, tomorrow morning,” McNear said. “For reasons ComNavFor has not chosen to share with me, it means he has changed his mind. Or MacArthur himself has. Specifically, it means we don’t have to go to the mouth of the Flying Fish Channel until the day after tomorrow, and when we get there, you don’t have to get in the Higgins boats—that we just sit there until they make up their minds what to do with us,” the captain said.
[THREE]
ABOARD LST-450 37 DEGREES 36 MINUTES NORTH LATITUDE, 126 DEGREES 53 MINUTES EAST LONGITUDE THE YELLOW SEA 0320 15 SEPTEMBER 1950
As oceangoing vessels go, LSTs are not very large, and LST-450 was moving at steerage speed, so ordinarily she would not be thought to be posing much of a threat to other vessels operating in the vicinity of the mouth of the Flying Fish Channel.
However, to the coxswain of one of the five Higgins boats bobbing in the water, the bulk of the LST approaching them, even barely moving, was a bit disturbing.
“Fuck him,” the twenty-one-year-old coxswain of the nearest boat said to no one in particular, and then took action that he considered to be necessary and of paramount importance to the safety of his vessel and crew.
He took a powerful searchlight from its compartment, turned it on, and shined it directly at the bridge of LST-450.
“We’re dead ahead of you, you dumb fuck!” the coxswain said. “See us now?”
On the bridge of LST-450, the sudden very bright light coming out of the blackness literally blinded the master, the helmsman, and Captain Howard Dunwood, USMCR.
“Full astern!” Captain McNear ordered. “Keep your eyes closed until that fucking light goes out! Where the fuck were the lookouts?”
“What the hell was that?” Captain Dunwood asked, his eyes tightly closed. He now saw an almost painful red ball, which took a long time to fade, even after the white light went out.
“I think we were just about to run over the Higgins boats,” McNear said.
In the next few minutes, it became apparent to Captain McNear that he had two choices regarding maintaining his position—three, if dropping anchor was included, something he did not want to do under any circumstances. One was to put his ship into reverse and try to hold it against the heavy tide now moving