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Excerpt from W.E.B. Griffin's
RETREAT, HELL!
[ ONE
]
Near Chong-Ju, South Korea
0815 28 September 1950
Major
Malcolm S. Pickering, USMCR, whose appearance and physical condition
reflected that he had not had a change of clothingmuch less
the opportunity to bathe with soap or shavesince he had been
shot down fifty-eight days before, sat between two enormous boulders
near the crest of a hill.
He
thoughtbut was by no means surethat he was about twenty
miles north of Taejon and about thirty miles south of Suwon. Where
he hoped he was, was in a remote area of South Korea where there
were few North Korean soldiers, lessening the chance that he would
be spotted until he could attract the attention of an American airplane,
and have someone come and pick him up.
Those
hopes were of course, after fifty-eight days, fading. Immediately
after he had been shot down, there had been a flurry of search activity,
but when they hadn't found him the activity had slowed down, andlogic
forced him to acknowledgefinally ceased.
He
wasn't at all sure that anyone had seen any of the signs he left
after the first one, the day after he'd been shot down. What he
had done was stamp into the mud of a drained rice paddy with his
boots the letters PP and an arrow. No one called him "Malcolm."
He was called "Pick" and he knew that all the members of his squadronand
other Marine pilotswould make the connection.
The
arrow's direction was basically meaningless. If the arrow pointed
northward, sometimes he went that way. More often than not, he went
east, west, or south. He knew that he couldn't move far enough so
that he wouldn't be able to see an airplane searching low and slow
for him in the area of the sign left in the mud.
He
had left other markers every otheror every thirdday
since he'd been on the run. The fact that there had been Corsairs
flying low over some of the markerslogic forced him to acknowledgewas
not proof that they had seen the markers. The Corsairs, when they
were not in direct support of the Marines on the ground, went on
combined reconnaissance and interdiction flights, which meant that
they were flying close to the deck, not that they had seen his markers.
It
was too risky to stay in one place, so he had kept moving. He'd
gotten his foodand an A-Frame to carry in itfrom South
Korean peasant farmers, who were anxious to help him, but made it
clear they didn't want anyoneeither the North Korean military
or a local communistto know that they had done so. In either
case, they would have been shot.
He
was, of course, discouraged. Logic forced him to acknowledge that
sooner or later, he was going to be spotted by North Koreans, or
by someone who would report him to the North Koreans. And if they
found him, he would be forced to make a decision that was not at
all pleasant to think about.
It
wasn't simply a question of becoming a prisoner, although that was
an unpleasant prospect in itself. Three times, since he had been
on the run, he had come across bodiesonce, more than thirtyof
U.S. Army soldiers who having been captured and after having their
hands tied behind them with commo wire, had been summarily executed
and left to rot where they had fallen.
If
the North Koreans spotted him, and he could not get away, he was
going to die. Not with his hands tied behind his back, but very
probably by his own hand, unless he was lucky enough to go down
with .45 blazing, a la John Wayne. Logic forced him to acknowledge
that was wishful thinking, that he couldn't take the risk of going
out in a blaze of glory, that he would have to do it himself.
Major
Pickering's father was Brigadier General Fleming Pickering, USMCR,
who was the Deputy Director of the Central Intelligence Agency for
Asia. For obvious reasons, young Pickering could not allow himself
to fall into North Korean hands.
It
was sort of a moot question anyway. With only five rounds left for
the .45, he couldn't put up much of a fight with two North Koreans,
much less a platoon of the bastards, or a company.
The
hilltop was bathed in bright morning sunlight, the rays of which
had finally warmed Major Pickeringit had been as cold as a
witch's teat during the nighthad not yet warmed the ground
fog in the valley below enough to burn it off.
That
meant both that Major Pickering could not see what he was looking
for, even through the 8x35 U.S. Navy binoculars he had somewhat
whimsicallyif, as it turned out, very fortuitously"borrowed"
from the USS Badoeng Strait just before taking off.
The
rice paddy in the valley where he had stamped out the last marker
in the mud was covered with ground fog.
He
set the binoculars down, and went into the bag tied to the A-Frame.
There was what was left of a roasted chicken carcass and the roasted
rib cage of a small pig. Surprising Major Pickering not at all both
were rotten to the point where trying to eat any of it would be
gross folly.
After
thinking it over carefully, he decided he would bury the rotten
meat before breakfast. He dug a small trench with a Kabar knife
and did so, and then went back into the A-Frame bag and took from
it three balls of cold rice. The smell they gave off was not appealing,
but it was not nausea-inducing, and he popped them one at a time
into his mouth and forced them down.
That
was the end of rations, which meant that he would have to get some
food today. That meant tonight. What he would do was come off the
hill, very carefully, and look for some Korean farmer's thatch-roofed
stone hut. When he found one, he would keep it under surveillance
all day, and go to it after dark, entering it with .45 drawn and
hoping there would be food offered, and that the farmer would not
send someone to report the presence of an American the moment he
left.
So
far, food had been offered, and North Korean troops had not come
looking for him at first light. So far he had been lucky. Logic
forced him to acknowledge that sooner or later, everybody's luck
changed, most often for the worst.
When
he drank from his canteenhe had twohe drained it, which
meant that when he found a Korean farmer's house, and more or less
threw himself on their mercy, he would have to stick around long
enough to boil water to take with him.
He
picked up the binoculars and trained them again on the rice paddy
below. The fog had burned off somewhat in the area; he could see
the dirt pathit didn't deserve to be called a roadleading
to it, but not the rice paddy itself.
"Oh,
shit," he said, aloud.
Two
vehicles were just visible on the path.
They
had to be North Koreans. It was entirely possible that these were
the first two motorized vehicles ever to move down the path used
by ox-drawn carts.
"I'm
losing my fucking mind," he said, softly, but aloud.
The
two vehicles were a jeep and a three-quarter-ton weapons carrier.
A large American flag was affixed to the tall antenna rising from
the rear of the jeep.
He
took the binoculars from his eyes, and then squinted his eyes and
rolled them around, and then raised them again, hooking the eyepieces
under the bone at his eye sockets.
The
jeep and the flag it had been flying. . .
Jesus
Christ, did I really see an American flag?
.
. . were no longer in sight in the ground fog, but the rear of the
weapons carrier was visible.
There
were men holding rifles standing at the back of it, in what looked
like U.S. Army uniformsbut he couldn't be sure
Jesus,
they're Gooks! What that is, is a captured weapons carrier, with
Gooks driving it.
And
they're right at the paddy when I stomped the signal in the mud!
Jesus
Christ, they're looking for me!
How
the hell did they know I was here?
Well,
if I have trouble seeing them with binoculars, they can't see me,
and that's a hell of a distance away.
Which way did I point the arrow?
South,
I pointed it south! I'm north. Maybe they won't even look this way.
And
maybe they will.
He
took the binoculars from his eyes again, and did the eye exercises,
and then put the eyepieces back to his eyes.
Another
man was now standing at the back of the weapons carrier, a rifle
slung from his shoulder. He was at least a foot taller than the
others.
Jesus,
that's a big Gook!
Gook,
shit, that's a white man!
Look
again. Don't do anything stupid!
He
exercised his eyes without removing the binoculars from his face.
When
he focused them again there was one more man at the back of the
weapons carrier, not quite as tall as the first one, but conspicuously
larger than the Orientals.
And
white. That's a white man.
Those
are U.S. Army soldiers.
Or
maybe Russians? The Russians would love to grab a downed aviator.
And if they are Russians, that would explain the jeep and the weapons
carrier.
Shit,
those are Americans! I can tell, somehow, by the way they stand.
So
what do I do now?
Signal
them, obviously. There's no way I can get down this fucking hill
in less than thirty minutes. It took me nearly an hour to climb
up here.
I
could fire the .45.
If they could hear it, which I don't think very likely, they won't
be able to tell from which direction the sound came.
If
I fire three shotssupposed
to be the distress signalthat'll
leave me two rounds. And if they can't hear the three shots, they
won't be able to recognize the distress signal, and I'm down to
two shots.
The
signaling mirror!
Where
the hell is that?
Jesus,
I didn't toss it, lose it, did I?
A frantic
search of the bag on the A-Frame turned up the signaling mirror.
It was an oblong of polished metal, maybe three by four inches.
There was an X-shaped cut in the center of it, presumably to be
used as some sort of aiming devicehe had never figured out
how that workedto reflect the rays of the sun, and the dots
and dashes of the international Morse code were embossed on one
side. He had never figured out how you were supposed to be able
to send Morse code with the mirror, either.
But
the basic idea of the mirror, reflecting the rays of the sun to
attract someone's attention, seemed simple enough, and he tried
to do that. He was quickly able to focus the reflected light on
boulders farther down the hill, and encouraged by that, tried to
direct the light all the way down the hill into the valley, to the
rear of the weapons carrier.
He
couldn't see the light flashing anywhere in the valley.
He
put the binoculars to his eyes again with his left hand, and tried
to aim the mirror with his right.
He
couldn't see a flash of light that way either.
But
he saw the two tall guys, the two Americans, vanish from sight,
and then the Gooks with them ...
Who
the hell are they?
...
crawled into the bed of the weapons carrier. And then the weapons
carrier backed off the ox path into the edge of the rice paddy.
The jeep reappeared ...
That
is an American flag, goddamn it!
...
and headed the other way down the ox path. The weapons carrier followed
it. In a moment, they were out of sight.
Jesus
H. Fucking
Christ!
Major
Pickering, close to tears, in a frustrated rage, threw the signaling
mirror down the hill.
He
laid on his back between the rocks for a full minute, and then heaved
himself erect.
Then
he went down the hill and started looking for the mirror.
[TWO]
The
jeepits bumper markings identified it as belonging to Headquarters
and Headquarters Company, 7th Infantry Divisionhad a pedestal-mounted
.30 caliber Browning air-cooled machine gun and the back seat had
been replaced with a rack of radios.
There
were three men in it, two Americans and a South Korean. One of the
Americans was Major Kenneth R. McCoy, USMCR, a lithely muscular,
even featured, fair skinned thirty-year-old. He was driving. The
other American was Master Gunner Ernest W. Zimmermann, USMCa
stocky, round faced, tightly muscled, short, barrel-chested thirty-five-year-old.
Zimmerman rode with his right foot resting on the fender extension,
the butt of a Thompson .45 ACP caliber submachine gun resting on
his muscular upper leg.
The
Korean was a South Korean National Police Sergeant named Kim. He
had no place to sit, and had jury-rigged, from web pistol belts,
a sort of a harness, and rode standingor half sittingin
a position to train and fire the machine gun. The rig looked both
uncomfortable and precarious but Sergeant Kim had neither complained
nor lost his footing.
Following
the jeep was the Dodge three-quarter-ton truck, called a "weapons
carrier," that also bore bumper markings identifying it as belonging
to the 7th Infantry Division, specifically to the 7th Military Police
Company.
It
was being driven by another National Police Sergeant, also named
Kim. Technical Sergeant Richard C. Jennings, USMCa long and
lanky twenty-six-year-oldrode beside him, with an M-1 Garand
rifle in his lap. Three sergeantsone Marine and two National
Policerode on the wood slat seats in the truck bed. Sergeant
Alvin C. Cole, USMC, was armed with a Browning automatic rifle (BAR),
and there was a .30 caliber air-cooled Browning on a bipod mount
on the floor of the truck. The Koreans were armed with M-2 (fully
automatic) carbines. Everybody was wearing U.S. Army fatigues without
insignia of any kind.
Major
McCoy didn't say a word for the next ten minutes, until the ox path
came onto a dirt road. He stopped the jeep, and took a map from
under the cushion.
"Well,
at least we know the bastard's still alive," he said. "Your guess
is he stamped that out twenty-four hours ago?"
"No
more than that. Just before they took the picture," Zimmerman said.
"Well,
if he hung around, he would have seen us," McCoy said. "I have no
idea where to look for him."
"What
do you want to do, Killer?" Zimmerman asked.
Marine
Master Gunners do not ordinarily address Marine majors by anything
but their rankor of course as "sir"but Major McCoy did
not seem to either notice or take offense.
"Well,
we can't hang around here, can we, Ernie?" McCoy said. And then
he added, bitterly, "If at first you don't succeed, fuck it."
He
put the jeep in gear and turned onto the dirt road, heading north.
[THREE]
Thirty-Eight
Miles South of Suwon, South Korea
1205 28 September 1950
The
map showed the unnamed roadwhich ran north from Pyongtaek
toward Suwon along the rail line, paralleling Korean National Route
1as paved, and surprising both Major McCoy and Gunner Zimmerman
it had been. They had been on it for just over an hour.
There
was always the potential threat of mines but neither the macadam
nor the cobblestones with which the road was paved showed signs
of having been disturbed. The shoulders, too, had appeared undisturbed,
although of course it would have been far easier to conceal the
traces of mine-burying in dirt and clay than in macadam or cobblestones.
The
thing to do, obviously, was stay off the shoulders, and they had
done so. And neither had they driven very fast. They wanted to have
plenty of time to stop in case they saw dislodged cobblestones or
suspicious looking disruptions in the macadam.
Major
McCoy raised his left arm above his head to catch the attention
of Sergeant Kim in the weapons carrier following, and then braked.
He
pointed to a copse of gnarled pine trees a hundred yards or so down
the road.
"I
don't think anyone'll see us in there," he said, adding, "I'm hungry."
He
slowed to a crawl as he approached the trees. Zimmerman first leaned
out the side of the jeep, studying the shoulder, and then held his
hand up in a signal to stop. Then he got out of the jeep and intently
studied the shoulder before motioning to McCoy to come ahead.
Then
he walked carefully across the shoulder and then down a slope into
a wide ditch. McCoy carefully eased the jeep after him, and then
Sergeant Kim followed with the weapons carrier.
McCoy
took a Thompson from a rack below the windshield, then got out of
the jeep, and walked carefully southward along the ditch, looking
for signs of disturbance in the mudand for trip wires, booby
traps, anything.
Finally,
when he was about one hundred yards from the vehicles, he stopped
and turned his attention to the grassy slope up to the road. Seeing
nothing out of the ordinary, he scurried up the slope. From the
road, he looked back to the copse of trees. He could not see anything
but the top of the jeep's antenna and maybe eight inches of the
flag.
He
went back into the ditch and returned to the vehicles. When he got
there, Sergeant Cole and two of the Koreans were waiting for him.
"See
that they're fed," McCoy ordered, "and then post one up there. You
can see where I climbed the slope."
"Aye,
aye, sir," Cole said.
"And
then post another one a hundred yards north. Watch out for mines
and wires."
"Mr.
Zimmerman's already been down there, sir."
"Then
you really better be careful," McCoy said, with a smile.
"Aye,
aye, sir," Cole said smiling back.
McCoy
walked to the jeep. The hood was up, and Zimmerman was warming cans
on the radiator. McCoy grabbed the antenna, bent it nearly horizontal,
and tied it down.
Without
really thinking about it, he made sure that no part of the flag
was touching the ground.
"I
couldn't see anything from the north," Zimmerman said.
"I
could see maybe eight inches of the flag," McCoy replied. "What
are we eating?"
"Salisbury
Steak and Beans and Franks," Zimmerman said. "Your choice."
McCoy
laid the Thompson on the driver's seat, and then reached for a ration
can.
"I
wonder who they think they're fooling when they call hamburger 'Salisbury
Steak'?" he asked, not expecting an answer.
He
leaned against the side of the jeep, took a fork from the baggy
side pocket of the Army fatigues and began to saw at the Salisbury
Steak in the ration can.
He
had just about finished raising the final forkful to his mouth when
there was a short, shrill whistle, and then a second. He laid the
ration can between the rear of the jeep and the back of the radio,
as he looked toward the sound of the whistle.
Sergeant
Cole, who had posted himself with the Korean to the south, made
several hand signals, not all of them official, indicating that
something of interest was happening, and he thought Major McCoy
should pay whatever it was his immediate attention.
"Heads
up," McCoy ordered, as he passed the jeeppicking up the Thompson
and a pair of U.S. Navy binoculars as he didand headed for
Cole.
Zimmerman,
similarly, made several hand signals to Technical Sergeant Jenningsthese
indicating that appropriate defense measures immediately be taken.
Jennings indicated his understanding of his orders with a thumbs-up
gesture. Zimmerman then trotted after McCoy, toward Sergeant Cole.
There
was little doubt in either McCoy's or Zimmerman's mind that what
had caught Sergeant Cole's attention was elements of the army of
the People's Democratic Republic of North Korea.
The
questions were: How large an element and what were they up to? Had
McCoy's two-vehicle convoy been spotted, and were the North Koreans
in pursuit of them? Or was it a unit trying to get away from the
Eighth Army, which had broken out of the Pusan Perimeter and was
in hot pursuit of the North Koreans up the peninsula?
Shattered,
demoralized, whatever, if it was a company strength unitor
a single tank, for that matterMcCoy & Company were going to
be seriously outnumbered, or outgunned, or both.
"What
have you got, Cole?" McCoy asked, handing him the Thompson.
"Looks
like a couple of jeeps, sir," Cole said. "Russian jeeps."
McCoy
crawled up the slope to the shoulder of the road and looked down
it through the binoculars. He then handed them to Zimmerman, who
had crawled beside him, and then slid down the slope. A moment later,
Zimmerman slid down and returned the binoculars to McCoy.
"Two
jeeps, and I make it five Slopes," Zimmerman said. "Moving slow;
probably looking for mines."
"The
passenger in the second jeep has leather boots-shiny leather boots,"
McCoy said. "I'd really like to talk to him."
"What
do we do, Killer?" Zimmerman asked.
"I
don't think we could get across the road without being seen," McCoy
said. "So, Cole, run down there and tell Jennings what's going on,
and to make sure if they get past Mr. Zimmerman and me, they don't
get past him."
"Aye,
aye, sir," Cole said. "You want me to come back here, sir?"
"No.
Your BAR will be more useful there, if they get past us."
Cole
nodded and took off at a run.
"How
do you want to do this?" Zimmerman asked.
"You
shoot out the tires of the first vehicle, and watch what happens
there. I'll deal with the second jeep." He paused. "I really want
to talk to that officer, Ernie."
"Okay,"
Zimmerman said. "You going to call it?"
"I'm
going to go another twenty-five yards that way, in case they turn
around. When I hear your shots . . ."
Zimmerman
nodded.
McCoy
moved quickly, but carefully, farther down the ditch, and then stopped,
examined the slope again, and then climbed up it.
Four
minutes or so later, McCoy could hear the exhaust of the engines
of the Russian jeeps, and the whining crunch of their tires on the
road. It grew slowly louder.
When
the first vehicle passed McCoy, he began to count. When he reached
ten, there were two bursts of fireone of three shots, followed
by a second of two. Then there was the squeal of worn-out brakes,
and then a loud thump.
McCoy
scrambled onto the road, going over the top of slope on his knees
and left handhe had the Thompson in the rightfeeling
for a moment a chill of helplessness until he gained his feet and
could put his hand on the forestock of the Thompson.
He
was very much aware that two hands were necessary to fire a Thompson.
It
took him a moment to see and understand what had happened.
The
Russian jeep with the North Korean officer in it was stopped, stalled
sidewards across the road, the driver grinding the starter. The
front end of the other jeep was off the road, halfway into the ditch
on the near side of the road. The frame had caught on the edge of
the road, keeping it from going all the way down into the ditch.
McCoy
had just time to wonderin alarmif by intention or accident
the jeep had run over Zimmerman when he heard Zimmerman order, in
Korean, "On your belly, you son of a whore."
McCoy
ran toward the stalled jeep.
The
officer was trying to work the action of a strange looking submachine
gun.
"I
don't want to kill you, Colonel," McCoy called, in Korean. "Just
drop that and hold your hands over your head."
[
RETREAT, HELL! Book X in W.E.B. Griffin's best-selling Corps
series published in paperback by Jove in December 2004. Click
here to find your favorite bookseller]
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