Whistle. - Whistle. Part 5
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Whistle. Part 5

Strange's arrival at the hospital a week before Winch was a big lucky break for Prell. Prell could tell, just from the way Strange treated him, that back up in the company in New Georgia, at least, nobody was thinking badly of him. No matter what Winch was saying. Strange thought Prell was some kind of a dumb hero, or something. Strange was a big help.

But all of that was just extra stuff added on the top. The patrol itself was still the patrol.

Whenever Prell thought of his squad and the patrol, a kind of fluttering qualm of apprehension rose in his stomach. It was not a qualm of conscience. It was a spasm of responsibility, dread and helplessness-a simple reflex to cry out No! no! It verged on panic. He always wanted to cry No! no!-and always, crying No! no! did not help or was too late. Their individual portraits flashed across the front of his mind like in-motion close-ups on a movie screen. A head turning sideways to grin. A shoulder rising beside a smiling face in a gesture. Then the anguished but clearly focused mental pictures he had of the hurt ones, each man of them, would follow. Dead, or dying, or wounded. He would never lose those. That horrible, Godawful clank that had given them away. A canteen, it had sounded like.

They were not even Prell's own squad. Prell had been moved to them when the original squad leader was shipped home sick. But he found little to improve on or change. They worked well together without him.

The mission was to patrol out and seek contact. A large Jap force had moved away from the center of the line in front of Munda and couldn't be found. Specifically, they were to find out if the Japs had reoccupied a small steep valley on the right that they had previously abandoned but now, intelligence thought, might have moved back into.

It was an almost routine job. If you counted it ordinary and routine to be walking miles in enemy territory along jungle trails that might at any moment be trip-wired or foot-mined in a jungle too dense to travel off the trails. It was impossible to describe the fatigue and exhaustion of that kind of walking. The narrow foot trails slicked over with mud. The valley they were to inspect they found empty.

On the way back, on a hunch, Prell decided to take them on a little detour up a side trail, to look at a small side valley. The trail veered off to the left uphill two hundred yards through the jungle to a low ridge. And the trail had been heavily used lately. Both Prell and his point man sensed something was going on over there beyond the ridge.

Halfway to the top he halted the squad and he and his point man crawled on up to have a look. The valley was alive with Jap infantry. The opposite valley wall was a semicliff and there were some small caves and overhangs on it and Japs were crawling all over it. They obviously were preparing an attack.

Both of them recognized Sasaki immediately. It wasn't hard to recognize a Jap general. Whenever he said anything, everybody else jumped. Sasaki was a heavy-chested man, well-fed, with a thick graying British-officer-type mustache. His picture had been posted around the Division, and a reward of $1000 was being offered to the man who killed him. Prell and the others knew about him only that Imamura and Admiral Kusaka, joint commanders of the Jap Southeast Area, had sent General Noboru Sasaki to command all of New Georgia after the American invasion. It gave Prell a sudden thrill to know that he held the life of an important man in his hands, and had carte blanche to kill him. He knew how political assassins must feel. Sasaki was with a group of other men, obviously officers, and they were studying two maps. In addition, Sasaki was smoking a big, fat, very un-Oriental cigar. He walked back and forth gesticulating with the cigar as he declaimed to the others. Prell put the binoculars he had been issued for the mission on him, anyway, to be sure. It was him, all right.

A lot of things were going through Prell's mind at that moment. He was already getting down into prone position and loop sling to fire. First was the idea Sasaki might get away, walk off somewhere out of sight or into one of the caves, the way he was moving about. Second was the thought that he himself, Prell, was the best shot in the squad, in any case. Third, the New Georgia campaign and the possible effect on it if he succeeded. Only fourth, if at all, was the splintered fast flash of thought of the personal fame and that $1000 he might get by knocking off the Jap commander in New Georgia. Prell was absolutely certain about the thought sequence.

As he got into his sling, he was already whispering to his point man. To go back. Get them ready to move out. No, get them moving now. But quietly. No noise. When he heard the first shot, he should start them running.

Prell was not worried about how he himself would get out. He would get out, all right. If only to claim that reward. But it had already occurred to him it was odd that with a general like Sasaki present there were no outposts around.

Thank God the two of them had gotten off the trail into the undergrowth, before they peeked over the crest. Prell had never felt more fully and more joyously alive than at that moment.

With the point man moving, he rolled down to get his sight. He was satisfied he had done everything correctly. He had his men already moving out. Everything was proper. He had forgotten nothing. Now all he had to do was shoot. Hoo, man. He had not scored High Expert and high regimental rifle four years running for nothing. But he wished he had a 1903 Springfield for this shot, with its folding leaf sight, instead of a Garand. He should have kept the point man here with him as a witness to the kill.

Below him the general was still walking and gesticulating. He must remember to allow for shooting downhill. He moved the rifle ahead of the general, to where the officers with the maps were. The general would stop, just there, just when he came up to the map . . .

It was then that he heard the single, loud clank of American equipment somewhere on the trail behind him, and wanted to curse.

It stopped him. And he lost his sight picture. The general was moving away from the maps again. Well, he would catch him at the other end of his pacing, when he stopped to turn. Prell moved the rifle ahead of him again.

Then he heard-or sensed-the jungle plants move behind him, and a Jap soldier leaped on him screaming and firing his rifle.

It was amazing the Jap did not hit him, at that short range. It did not say much for their rifle training. Warned a fraction of a second ahead of time, Prell was already rolling, and fired three fast rounds into the man's chest as it touched his rifle barrel. Then he was on his feet ready to run. But nobody else was there. More firing and screaming was coming from back down the trail. It had the sound of catastrophe.

Prell cast one last, anguished glance behind him. There was no hope. The general was moving swiftly, into one of the caves, surrounded tightly by the bodies of the other officers, to protect him. There was nothing to do. Prell ran.

They were lucky. A big, well-prepared patrol would have killed them all, at once. Apparently the group that heard them was a small one of only five men, and had no help nearby. When he came running down, his men were just finishing killing the fifth. One of his men was slightly wounded. A nick. His own single Jap trooper apparently had been all alone.

Prell slowed long enough to yell at them to move. The ones in front were already running down the trail, and needed no urging. The others began to follow. "Move, move," he screamed at them. The Jap troops often called mortars down in on themselves, and Prell had anticipated it.

Mortar shells began to whump in around them. One man a little in front of Prell went down from a near direct hit. Prell and the man immediately in front of Prell, hardly pausing, scooped him up by the armpits and half-carried him. A man up ahead dropped back and took over Prell's half of him to free Prell. Prell paused, to make sure they were all in front of him and running, then turned around to fire rear guard, running backward. But no enemy were visible behind them on the trail. Another man went down from a mortar round but got up and ran on by himself. Then the patrol was apparently through the mortar screen. That was when the .50 caliber took them from the flank.

The Jap was firing from an obtuse angle to the line of the trail. Fortunately, they had run nearly through his field of fire by the time he could get his gun going. Fortunately, most of them were already through. Only the men at the tail end caught the fire.

Prell, of course, was the last man. A burst caught him across the thighs, and cut him off from his legs and feeling them just as if a big scythe had swept through a field, and Prell knew he had had it, or if he hadn't, his legs certainly had. The impact seemed to fling him forward. As he started to fall, he watched the same burst, drifting higher, take the two men running downhill in front of him across the lower back and lungs, inches higher on the third man than on the second. There was no question they were killed. The third man was his point man, Crozier. Both bodies went on running several yards before they fell. Prell, his teeth clenched, by sheer force of will, helped along by the push of the heavy bullets, managed to run past them on his non-legs before he too folded up like thin cardboard and fell straight down on his face, headlong, sprawling. He had the curious impression that he was continuing still to run, horizontally, even as he struck. But as he fell his mind told him none of it really mattered anyway, because his mind told him he was finished.

He yelled and a couple of his squad ran back for him, in tandem, like a pair of matched, finely trained horses, and got him by his armpits. But in the same moment, miraculously, all firing stopped. The jungle quiet, always ominous, and never really quiet, which seemed to drip from the trees like moisture, fell on them.

They turned him over on his back. His number two crawled over. Their faces looked scared. "Well, let's see! Let's see!" Prell demanded irately. "Damn it!" He needed passionately to know. See for himself how bad it was. "Don't just sit there!" His number two and another man unbuckled his belt and began to pull his pants down. Prell, beginning to sweat as they moved him, sent two men back up the trail for the two dead. Crozier, and Sims. He was damned if he was going to leave them here, for the Japs to piss on, or eat, or whatever it was they did with their captured dead.

The legs were a mess, when they got his pants down. Like hamburger. It made his belly go cold inside, looking at them. The skin across his thighs was already turning blue from bruise. It was impossible to tell how many of the heavy .50 caliber bullets had hit him. He was bleeding badly. But there didn't seem to be any arterial bleeding. The first hopeful sign. His number two sprinkled sulfa powder on them and began tying on tight compresses. While he did, Prell briefed him, through clenched teeth, on what he had seen and on the presence of Sasaki, "In case anything should happen to me."

Prell knew he had to get them out of there. And do it swiftly. There wasn't anything he could do for Crozier and Sims, but he could still do something for the others. The other two wounded could walk, after a fashion. He himself couldn't walk, and he could feel the bones grate together in his legs. Two other men were already improvising a stretcher out of their buttoned-up fatigue blouses and two rifles. When they got him on it and hoisted him, Prell thought for a moment he would pass out. Then he got them moving and out of there.

As they moved away, mortar rounds began to drop singly around the trail junction, searching for them with tree bursts. By a matter of minutes he had anticipated them again.

As they moved along, the thought of the state of his legs made Prell's belly go cold again inside. You never considered how important your legs were to you until you didn't have them and couldn't call on them. There was no way you could move much at all, when you didn't have legs. It was then that he made up his mind that if he lost them, he wouldn't stay.

They knew they only had half a mile to go. But on the mud-slicked trail the going was difficult. For the walking wounded, the men carrying the dead and the men carrying Prell. Up to then Prell had not felt much pain, just a dull toothache in his legs that warned him the pain would be coming and he could depend on it. On the march, it came. With each step of the men carrying him he could feel the splintered ends of his femurs moving around in the already tortured flesh of his thighs like sharp instruments, further lacerating the already torn meat. He was worried one of them might cut its femoral artery, and tried to hold as still as possible. But it was impossible to be still. For Prell it was the beginning of an odyssey of movement and pain that would continue for two months and carry him halfway around the world to the Army hospital in Luxor. And the pain part wouldn't end then. He had put one of his BAR men back as rear guard and the other out front, to try to fend off any Jap patrols hunting for them. Luckily they did not meet any head-on. As they got nearer to their own lines, the trail branched out into a series of parallel trails and transverses that the Japs had built to supply their now-abandoned line. Here he could maneuver a little and give them the slip. Twice they hid, as talking Jap squads moved along nearby parallel trails looking for them. But the fatigue-blouse stretcher under Prell's legs was beginning to be soaked with his heavy bleeding. He went halfway out and came back several times. When they got within hailing distance of their own line, they decided they had better take a chance and yell for help.

A reinforced patrol with a medic in it came out to cover them while the medic worked on Prell and strung a plasma bottle on him, and then escorted them in, to everybody's vast relief and delight. At the battalion aid station the battalion surgeon looked at the legs and shook his head. Dolefully. He crudely splinted the legs to keep the femurs from working any more and had Prell strapped on a regular, real stretcher to be jeeped out. For Prell this was the end of it, and he knew it, at least with this outfit. He would probably never see this outfit again. There had been times when he had hated it, and every person in it, but now he hated to leave it. As they hung him on the body-loaded jeep, he kept his face set. He was flown out the next afternoon. The battalion commander gave the whole squad the morning off, to come down and see him. That did not sound as if anybody suspected him of misconduct.

It had not been a lucky patrol. All the same, Prell knew he had done everything right and correctly. He had done everything both according to the rules themselves, and according to the unwritten law that, unspoken, went along with the rules. The unwritten law was that you never risked your men. Unless the gain was worth it. Double worth it. In Prell's case the gain had been worth more than that. Even if it had never got realized.

At the aid station, while they splinted him up and took care of the other wounded, there was a lot of rehashing of the patrol by the healthy, and the subject of the loud clank that had given them away to the Japs came up. Prell only heard the first part of it. He made his report to the battalion commander, stressing the coming attack and how close he had come to getting Sasaki, and then, relaxing his control and aided by the shot the doc gave him, quietly passed out for a while. There was more rehashing in the Division hospital when the squad came down to say good-by to him, and the clank of equipment they had all heard came up again. None of them, nor the other wounded either, would admit to having been the cause of it.

Several men thought the point man, Crozier, had done it when he came running down to them. Perhaps one of the dead men, Crozier or Sims, had done it. If one had, both had certainly paid dearly for it. More than anyone could punish either for now. Prell could only think bitterly how that single clank had kept him from becoming famous, kept him from getting $1000, and how it might still cost him both of his legs. It probably had kept him from single-handedly shortening the whole New Georgia campaign by a month. Because in the end, the cocky, strutty General Sasaki had put up an obstinate, gallant defense that was still going on in August, when they reached Frisco, and would go on into October. It was still winding down when Prell reached Luxor. He only heard of the end of it there. By that time he no longer really cared about New Georgia.

Prell had had a hard time of it, in the Division rear hospital, to keep from breaking down completely when the remnants of the squad-there were only nine now-filed out of the big tent after saying good-by. He had had to exercise all his considerable will power to keep tears from coming in his eyes. These nine men had saved his life. They had put together a makeshift stretcher for him without even being asked, and had carried him at least a mile along slippery trails, without being ordered to. At great risk to themselves. And without so much as one word of complaint or grumble. They had performed like princes. And they had saved him, and Prell hated to see them go away from him a last time. What they thought of him meant more to him than whether he ever got any medal, and they clearly thought well of him. For this, he loved them back.

In the railroad hospital car, the pain in his legs hurting him more than he could remember it ever had, he missed them deeply and he missed the company. At least on the ship he had had Strange and Landers to talk to once in a while. But after the shake-up at Letterman, he hadn't seen either again. He had caught one fleeting glimpse of Strange at a distance, ambling down a hospital corridor in a GI bathrobe. That was all. He did not know whether either of them was going to Luxor. In fact, both of them were on the train, in other cars up forward, but Prell had no way of knowing that. He knew that there were some members of the company at Luxor; he had heard it vaguely somewhere. He hoped he would be able to get together with them. Without the old company, Prell did not really feel he belonged anywhere. And he was beginning to suspect that that was the way it was going to be, from now on, and go on being. All that was past, and in the past, and every hour and every mile put it further and further behind them all.

As the train started, sending a painful jerk up his hurting legs to the broken thighs, Prell realized he had not even seen one building of all of San Francisco. Before, on his way through, he had picked up a girl downtown on Market Street, and spent two days with her screwing in a hotel. He wondered how she was, and what might have happened to her. As the train began to fall into its peculiar rhythm of movement and speed up, he shut his eyes.

CHAPTER 6.

WINCH WAS ONE OF the few who did not have to go through the reprocessing. Almost before he was settled in, Winch found he had a friend in court at Letterman.

While the others were being sifted and sorted, and shunted from clerical team to clerical team, or hauled off in the ambulances down to their trains with their blue tags or green tags or yellow tags tied on their arms, Winch sat on his bed in a nearly empty ward and played solitaire or dealt himself poker hands, and waited for the three-day or five-day pass the hospital administration was sending down to him.

This was what came of knowing people in high places. Winch found it ironic. Most of the wounded from the ship would have given their eyeteeth to stay on, and get out into the town and taste again an American city. Winch had no desire to stay on, or to go on pass in the city. It was almost laughable. But Winch could not scare up enough good feelings in him to laugh. On the other hand, you didn't turn down an unexpected, gratuitous pass into San Francisco.

They had assigned him to the heart ward. For a check-out, they said. Winch had not been in it an hour, when a baby-faced 2nd/lt opened the door and stuck his head in, and asked if 1st/Sgt Winch was there. When Winch admitted he was, the boy handed him a sealed envelope. "I'll wait," the lieutenant said, "in case there's any answer, sir."

The envelope was a handsome one, with an embossed Letterman General return address on it and no stamps. "Deliver By Hand" was scrawled across the face. The letter inside it, when Winch unfolded it, was from old T.D. Hoggenbeck. Winch had known old T.D. in Fort Sam Houston six years before. Old T.D. had been a tech/sgt when Winch was serving his first tour as a newly made staff/sgt. Old T.D., nicknamed "Touchdown," naturally enough, was now a senior warrant officer, the typed signature showed, and sgt/maj of Personnel Records Section at Letterman. Winch should, "Come up and see [me] sometime," when he had nothing to do.

Sgt/maj of Personnel Records at Letterman was no mean, lousy job. God knew how many wounded passed through there. And each soldier's sacred Service Record booklet and 201 File had to go with him wherever he went, and could not be lost. The records a hospital ship carried for its wounded must have taken up almost as much room as the bodies.

"Sure, sir, any time. I'll take you up there right now if you want," the lieutenant said, when Winch asked him. "I can show you the way." Winch stared at him curiously, and only nodded. He was not used to being called "sir" by officers, however young. The lieutenant was authoritative enough with the ward boy and the nurse on the ward, though.

The corridors were jammed. Another ship was due in from New Guinea in a few days, and space had to be cleared, people had to be moved east to make room. When they got to the right building, making their way along through all the frenetically moving men in uniforms or bathrobes, the Personnel Records Section was on the top floor.

The office itself looked as big as a basketball court. There must easily have been fifty or sixty desks in it. Down at the other end, where the lieutenant led him, and where there was a plate-glass window through which old T.D. could look out over his toiling slaves, was old T.D.'s office. It was not a cubicle.

The w/o himself stood leaning his meager buttocks against his desk edge, his skinny arms folded over his thin chest. He must have seen them coming through the plate glass, but he made no move and said nothing, until the lieutenant had gone out and closed the door. Then he stood up and grinned. But he did not shake hands. Instead, he came forward with both arms out. With his two hands he took Winch by both shoulders, and shook him a little, and then embraced him, putting both arms clear around him. Watching with a cold curiosity, Winch wondered if T.D. was not actually going to get tears in his eyes.

"How are you, Mart old boy, how are you?" old T.D. said.

"Hello, T.D.," Winch said. "Looks like you got yourself a fair berth here. Even got second lieutenants to run errands for you."

"I got more than that," Hoggenbeck said, grinning, and went behind his desk, where he got out a bottle of Seagram's Seven Crown and two glasses. "See? I even remembered your brand." He did not bother to close the curtains over the plate glass. Winch was acutely aware of its openness behind them. "When I seen your name on that manifest, I sent somebody right out for a bottle." He paused to take a breath. "You fellows who are doing so much for us out there, you by God deserve every by God thing we can give you." Winch thought coldly that this time there actually were a few tears in the chicanerous old hypocrite's eyes. Probably they were even sincere. "Yes, I got a lot more than that," Hoggenbeck said, taking back up his first thread. "Second looies for office boys, and captains and majors for assistants. They're finally beginnin to realize just how valuable and important some of their old-time Regular noncoms are to this nation. There's more worthless commissions floating around, that don't know how to do nothing, than you can shake your dick at. Political commissions, that somebody bought for their kid or their cousin. They're full up to choking with them. Nobody knows what to do with 'em and men like me and you can just about write our own ticket. I got me a big house outside the Presidio, and buying another. Got a piece of the NCOs' Club. I'm in on a piece of the PX. Got a half interest in one of the gambling sheds. My wife's got a shop. I tell you the sky's just about the limit around here nowadays. The sky's not even the limit. They need us, Mart," old T.D. said, "they need us. Without us, nobody can run this damned civilian Army for them." He filled the glasses. "Here," he said, and poked one of them across the desk. "I knew your Division was out there. Relieved the 1st Marine on Guadalcanal. Then I saw your name on that boat roster, and you could of knocked me down." He drained his own glass. "Tell me, what's it like out there, Mart. Pretty rough? Hunh? Where were you hit?"

Winch thought his own mind must be deserting him, because he felt ice-cold all over. The whiskey in his glass seemed to have disappeared even before he touched the glass. Old T.D. refilled it. Winch's teeth clenched. He wanted to pick up the beautiful, precious bottle of Seven Crown and crown Hoggenbeck with it, split his skull. In full view of every eye on the other side of the plate glass.

"Pretty tough? Pretty rugged, hunh? Is it as rough as the papers say? Don't want to talk about it, eh?"

A picture of his blank-faced, fear-eyed platoons, bleeding and breathing mud for every yard of ground, passed across the inside of Winch's eyes. Through it, he studied his old drinking buddy, coldly. Icy. All of that had nothing to do with any of this, nothing at all.

"It's hell, T.D.," Winch said, straight-faced. "Real hell. They're great, tough fighters, those Japs. Rough. They're mean."

"I know they are, I know they are," T.D. said.

"And they know the jungle. But we'll lick them, T.D., we'll lick them," Winch said.

"I know we will, I know we will," old T.D. said.

Winch realized his second glass was gone. T.D. refilled it. And refilled his own. "That jungle's rough, hunh? Where did you get hit?"

"In the leg," Winch said.

"Was it bad?"

"It was pretty bad. In fact, it was terrible, T.D."

"Did you have a heart attack, too?"

"No, nothing like that. Just what they call a murmur. But the two, together. You know. And I was pretty sick, from dengue and malaria. I figured it ought to be enough to get me home, and that it was about time."

T.D. cackled, and his bushy eyebrows went up and down. "I figured, I figured," he giggled.

Winch winked, and then noted his third glass was gone. The straight, blended American whiskey, neat like that, was like the ambrosia of the gods. They could have all the Scotch in the world, if he could have one bottle of Seagram's Seven. Old T.D. pushed the bottle over to him.

"You help yourself," T.D. said. "I've got to keep my head about me. Got work to do. But you go ahead."

Winch shook his head.

"You always could drink more than me," T.D. said. "Or anybody." He grinned. Leaning back in his deluxe swivel chair, he told Winch what he wanted to do for him.

There was no need for Winch to go through the reprocessing. By evening T.D. would have a three-day or a five-day pass for him. A five-day, if he could slip it through. After that, Winch could have another five-day, and another. When he was ready to go east, Hoggenbeck would get him on an Army Transport Command plane and fly him, to any of the eastern hospitals he chose.

Winch, in his depression, had not even thought about San Francisco. Now he thought about it. "I haven't even got a uniform, T.D.," he said.

"They'll issue you a uniform!" T.D. grabbed a book of chits on his desk, and a pen.

"Oh. I know those hospital issue uniforms," Winch said. There seemed no way to escape from T.D.'s overeffusive generosity.

"Wear them outside the gate, and go to a tailor shop!" T.D. cried. "You can get an officer's tropical worsted with shoulder straps at any joint on Market Street for thirty-six bucks!" Did he have money? Otherwise, old T.D. would arrange it for him to draw a partial-pay voucher.

Winch said he had money.

"Then you're all fixed," T.D. cried. "For a fine time. I wish it was me. You won't believe this town, Mart. It's changed. It's like it must of been during the Gold Rush."

He'd be glad to invite him out to the house for dinner, T.D. added. But he was sure a quiet dinner with his old woman was not what Winch was looking for. Not after them jungles.

The petty stuff out of the way, Hoggenbeck hitched his chair closer and, grinning, said he had something else to tell him. When he had seen Winch's name on that early ship's roster, he had started doing a little exploring. He wanted to send Winch to the hospital in Luxor, Tennessee. The point was, T.D. could do just about anything he wanted to from here, with in-transit casuals. He knew Winch's wife was installed in St. Louis, and that might prove a big hitch. He had looked up Winch's records as soon as they came in. But if Winch did not mind not going to St. Louis, he thought he had something pretty good lined up for him.

"Between you and me, T.D.," Winch said, "I'd a whole lot rather not go to St. Louis. And if my wife didn't receive any official notification about where I was sent, I wouldn't be disturbed at all."

"That can be handled, that can be handled," old T.D. said. "Notifications git lost."

The point was, Luxor, Tennessee, was also the headquarters of the Second Army Command. And Second Army Command would shortly be in need of a new sgt/maj for its Personnel G-1 office. Old Frank Maynard there was about on his last legs and they were going to retire him. Hoggenbeck was still in touch with a couple of his old commanding officers who were down there now, and had already spoken to them about Winch. The point was, when Winch came out of hospital at Luxor, if he went there, he would automatically go right into Second Army Command in any case. And from there it would be just a simple step. They could discover him. "If you're interested, Mart," old T.D. grinned, "I'll write them right away today. How about it?"

The point was, it was the kind of long-term, not very killing kind of a job-a sinecure, old T.D. said-that Winch or a man like him should have, and that Winch deserved. And it wouldn't hurt old Frank Maynard, because old Frank was going out anyway.

Winch looked up. It was one of those refined, delicate, shrewdly juggled pieces of old-Army-type manipulation, as finely balanced and calculated as any Winch had ever put together. As an old, professional manipulator himself, Winch had to admire it.

Winch had been nodding and hardly listening, but his ears and attention straightened up when he heard Luxor, Tennessee, mentioned. Luxor, he seemed to remember, was one of the places where a good-sized number of men from his old company happened to be congregated. He dimly recalled someone mentioning it. Then he pulled himself up short. It was he who had warned Johnny Stranger that all that of the company was finished and over. Still, it was a good deal old T.D. was proposing to him. It was exactly the kind of deal that, a few years back, before Guadalcanal, he used to dream of and imagine for himself. But he had imagined himself as old.

"Tell them I'd be very pleased to have it," he said.

"By God, I'll do just that," old T.D. said, and cracked his palms together. "You'll make junior warrant officer out of it within a year. That's great, boy, that's great."

Winch realized suddenly that, although it rankled, he was going to have to thank old T.D. Hoggenbeck for it.

"I'll tell you something, Mart," T.D. said. "I'm sitting pretty right now, and I know it. But I won't be for very long and I know that too, once this war gets over and we go back to anti-Army and the reaction sets in. But I aint going to stay in a full thirty years. Or twenty, if it's that. When it's over, I'm getting out. You'll be smart to do the same. I know what I am, and I know what I'm worth. And I know I'm valuable, for right now, anyway. And if there's anything I can do for any of my old buddies who've been out there and come back through here, I'm sure'n hell gonna do her. You're the first one to come back that I know of. If there's anything I can do more for you, don't you hesitate to pop up here and let me know it."

He rubbed his hands together. "Say, I'll tell you something else. Did you know you're getting the Distinguished Service Medal?"

Winch looked at him unbelievingly. "Who the hell did that?"

"Not me, not me. Don't look at me," T.D. said, enjoying his surprise. "There's some things I can't do. No. But it's all on your records. Recommended by your Division commander. With personal recommendations from your battalion commander and your company commander. And, of all people, your old Division surgeon."

Before Winch left, T.D. hauled out two flat pint bottles of the Seagram's and thrust them on him. "Stick 'em down inside your pajama belt, and hold them up with your bathrobe pockets. Go on, take 'em. No, don't thank me, Christ's sake. You fellows, you've been out there. That's all I need to know." At the door, he offered one last word of advice. "When you're set up down there, buy real estate. Buy a bar. You can't go wrong with a bar."

A little less than three hours later, not quite five hours after the ship had put her nose against the Embarcadero dock, while the others off her were finishing their warmed-over supper off compartmented tin plates, Winch was standing on the corner of Geary and Market at Lotta's Fountain with his hands in the pockets of an officer's tropical worsted with shoulder straps for thirty-six dollars, from a tailor joint on Market Street. He was already half drunk. It felt wonderful.