Under Fire - By W.E.B. Griffin Page 0,76

waited for the Commandant to continue. And continued to wait until a dial tone told him that the Commandant, having said all he wished to say, had terminated the conversation.

Dawkins put the phone back in the cradle and mused, aloud, “I wonder what the hell that’s all about?”

“What what’s about?”

“That was the Commandant. I’m about to get an Urgent TWX from the JCS informing me that Brigadier General Fleming Pickering is coming here, and I am to give him whatever he asks for and tell him anything that he wants to know.”

“Pickering?”

“He was on Guadalcanal, G-2 for a while when Goettge got killed . . .”

Craig nodded, indicating he knew who Dawkins was talking about.

“And the last I heard got out of the Corps the minute the war was over.”

“What’s he want here?”

“I have no idea. Whatever it is, it’s Direction of the President, ” Dawkins said.

Craig pursed his lips thoughtfully, and then both men returned to the most pressing problems involved in forming, organizing, and equipping a provisional Marine brigade under orders to sail within ten days.

[TWO]

U.S. NAVY/MARINE CORPS RESERVE TRAINING CENTER ST. LOUIS, MISSOURI 1920 5 JULY 1950

Captain George F. Hart pulled his nearly new unmarked blue Chevrolet into a parking slot behind the building, stopped, and reached for the microphone mounted under the dash.

“H-1,” he said into it.

Hart was thirty-two years old, nearly bald, and built like a circus strong man.

“Captain?” Dispatch responded. H-1 was the private call sign of the Chief, Homicide Bureau, St. Louis Police Department. Dispatch knew who he was.

“At the Navy Reserve Training Center until further notice. ”

“Navy Reserve Training Center, got it.”

“You have the number?”

“I think so.”

“ ‘Think’ don’t count. Know. Check.”

“Yes, sir,” the dispatcher said, his tone suggesting he didn’t like Captain Hart’s tone.

“I have the number, Captain,” the dispatcher said, and read it off.

“That’s it,” Hart said.

“Yes, sir,” the dispatcher said.

Hart put the microphone back in its bracket, turned the engine off, got out of the car, went in the backseat and took from it a dry cleaner’s bag on a hanger, locked the car, and then entered the building through a rear door to which he had a key.

He often thought the U.S. Navy/Marine Corps Reserve Training Center looked like a high school gymnasium without the high school.

The ground floor was essentially a large expanse of varnished wooden flooring large enough for two basketball courts, and there were in fact two basketball courts marked out on the floor, their baskets now retracted up to the roof. At one end of the floor was the entrance, and at the other rest rooms, and the stairway to the basement, which held lockers and the arms room.

On one side of the floor were the glass-walled offices of the Naval Reserve, and on the other, the glass-walled offices of the Marine Corps Reserve.

Hart unlocked the door with “COMMANDING OFFI-CER” lettered on the glass, then closed it, locked it, and checked to see that the venetian blinds were closed. One was not, and he adjusted it so that no one could see into his office.

His office was furnished with a desk, a desk chair, two straight-back chairs, two chrome armchairs, a matching couch, and a double clothing locker.

He unlocked the doors to both, then started getting undressed. First he took off his jacket, which revealed that he was wearing a shoulder holster. The holster itself held a Colt Model 1911 .45 ACP semiautomatic pistol under his left armpit. Under his right armpit, the harness held two spare seven-round clips for the pistol, and a pair of hand-cuffs.

So far as Captain Hart knew, he was the only white shirt in the department who elected to carry a .45. Only white shirts—lieutenants and higher; so called because their uniform shirts were white—were allowed to carry the weapon of their choice. Sergeants and below were required to carry the department-issued handgun, either Smith & Wesson or Colt .38 Special five-inch-barrel revolvers. Plainclothes cops and detectives were required to carry two-inch-barrel .38 Special revolvers.

When Hart had come home from World War II to become a detective again, he had ignored that regulation, and carried a .45. As a detective, he had shot two people with a .38 Special, neither of whom had died, and one of whom, despite being hit twice, had kept coming at him until he hit him in the head with the pistol butt. The people he had shot in the Corps with a .45 had gone down and stayed down, usually dead. He had

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