Gone
By
Carol Foss
Birthday parties were a common
enough occurrence aboard Seaview, and everyone was enjoying the cake and ice
cream in the Crew’s Mess. But there was an undertone of concern that had
nothing to do with it.
“You sure that message the Skipper
got was from ComSubPac?” Pat asked Ski.
“Overheard O’Brien myself. ”
“Well it could be good news,
I guess,” Cookie sat down, taking a break from his galley duties, “maybe
somebody’s gotten a promotion or something.”
“More likely old battle britches
Starke wants us to go save the world from giant jellyfishes again,” Patterson joked.
“Well, I’m sure tired
of being overlooked and underrated,” Ski said.
“If anyone’s overlooked and
underrated it’s Morton.”
“Nah, it’s the Skipper. It’s about
time he got that fourth stripe,” Cookie piped
up.
“Kind of doubtful,” Sharkey helped
himself to another piece of cake, “especially since he turned it down oh, since
well before Seaview.”
“He
what?”
“Yeah,”the
Chief chuckled, “he really pissed the Board off. Used some
kind of some kind of technicality to prevent them from forcing it on him.”
“Like, why’d he turn it down?”Riley
asked. “It’s not normal.”
“Who says this Skipper’s ever normal?”
“Now you wait just a damn minute!”
Ski voiced.
“Look,kid, all I meant was that anyone in command of
Seaview has to be crazy.”
“If he ticked them off so bad, why’d
they give him the Celeste? That was his last boat wasn’t it? She’s still pretty
much the top of the line in the Navy!”
“Shhhh,”
Cookie warned, “somebody’s coming…”
Morton appeared at the door with Lt.
O’Brien, “Chief, we thought we’d pop by to offer our congratulations. Many happy returns.”
“Thank you, sirs.”
“By the way, there’s no more cake in
the Wardroom.”
“And it was sooo
good,” O’Brien added, trying very hard to look young and innocent.
“By a happy chance there’s just
enough left for both of you,” Cookie cut them the last two slices,“I saved a piece for the Skipper but…I guess he mighta’ forgot about it. Have it in the galley for safekeeping.”
“With Morton’s stomach you’d have
too,” Ski whispered.
“I heard that, Ski,” Morton said
with a grin from where he was standing against the wall.
“Er, Mr.
Morton, sir,” Riley braved, “what was in that message the Skipper got from ComSubPac? Are we goin’ to war?
Or maybe the Skipper’s gotten his fourth stripe? Is it
true he got the Navy, like, all riled when he turned it down
before?”
“He
what?”
“That’s what the Chief said.”
Morton raised an inquiring eyebrow,the slice of cake on his
paper plate temporarily forgotten.
“It’s true!.
I got it straight from the horse’s mouth…er…from a
reliable source. A real reliable source.”
“Which just happens to be?”
“Er…Admiral
Nelson, sir.”
“Well,” the XO finally broke the stunned
silence, “if the Skipper turned it down, that’s his own business. Frank, if
you’re finished, go tell the Captain if he
doesn’t get his butt down here soon, that saved piece of cake is liable to be
hijacked. Er…you might want to rephrase that .”
“Don’t bother sir,
I was planning to take it to him if he didn’t show by now…you supposed he’s all
done with that message by now? If it’s not top secret or
something like that?”
“Stop fishing Cookie. If the Captain
wants us to know what was in the message, he’ll tell us. Again, Happy Birthday
Chief,” Morton said before he and O’Brien departed, still eating his cake.
***
The officers
were checking the charts at the plot table when Cookie approached from
the spiral ladder in the Observation Nose
Chip almost drooled over the huge
slice of cake, probably worth three of what he’d had.
“Can I talk to you Mr. Morton?”
“Go ahead.”
“In
private, sir?”
Morton nodded and herded them
man toward the view ports and away from prying ears in Control.
“Well?” Morton prodded as the man
hesitated to speak.
“Something’s wrong with the Skipper.
That’s why I couldn’t deliver this to him.”
“What do you mean something’s wrong
with him?”
“Er…you’re
not going to believe it, and maybe I got it all wrong, his door being
closed, but …er…well, sir…I coulda’
sworn the Skip was…that he was…well, crying or something.”
“Crying?”
“The Admiral’s okay isn’t he? I mean
that message…”
“Don’t say anything to anyone!”
Morton raced up the ladder.
***
“Lee?” Morton knocked.
No answer.
“Lee?” he opened the door slowly.
Crane’s back was to Morton as he
tossed some clothes into his duffel. A clear plastic garment bag hung on the bunk frame, his dress whites sparkling
from inside, along with cover.
“Lee, what’s wrong… Lee?” Chip
grabbed his arm, turning the man to face him. His eyes were red. So Cookie
hadn’t gotten it wrong.
“The
Admiral?” Morton barely managed.
“What?”
“The
Admiral! What happened?”
“What are you talking about?”
“ Cookie said he heard you in here…” Chip paused,
“upset about the communique from ComSubPac. What else could it be but about Admiral Nelson?”
“No,” Lee sighed, “it’s not Nelson….
Chip, I need the Flying Sub. Asap.”
“You’re in no shape to fly! You’re
trembling. What is it?”
“See for yourself,
” Crane motioned to the printouts on his desk, “… a friend of mine’s…
died. And all Starke can think of is clearing out his office!” Lee took a deep
breath then continued, “Admiral Starke’s aide. Joe. Lt. Cmdr. Joe Jackson. We…go
back…went back a long way,” Cane corrected himself, and began to ramble.
“’Clean out his office, Crane, help me interview replacements! Serve as my
aide in the interim’ … I swear that man was born without a heart! Not a
thought about Joe, just his damn schedule…I hate him…I…”Lee gulped. “It was an
accident..Joe’s car…it…it careened off the road,
rolled over and over and over, right down a cliff, and…and…exploded.”
“Oh God,
Lee.”
“They couldn’t get any DNA
from……what was left, ” Lee whispered, his voice
breaking, “no tags, it was a weekend, but it was his car, the ones with those
new ID chips…” Crane’s eyes were haunted, agonized. “I…I
love…loved him like a brother, Chip, and now…now… he’s gone…gone…Give
me a few minutes alone, will you…”Lee was at the breaking point.
“It’s okay to cry, Lee,” Chip put an
arm around his shoulder, but was unsure Lee
would welcome a more supportive embrace.
He wished Nelson was here. It had
become pretty apparent over the last year that the two had
bonded beyond normal, the great differences in their ranks
notwithstanding.
“Please, Chip,”Lee
pulled away gently, “thanks, but …I need to be alone.…let
me know when the Flying Sub’s ready.”
“Aye sir.”
***
“Chief?” Morton returned to the Control Room, the new watch at the
ready, “Get me a volunteer to co-pilot the
Skipper to Pearl Harbor. Right away.”
“Kowalski? You’re drafted.,” then took the XO
aside as Ron relieved Ski, “what’s up sir?”
“There’s been a
death that the Captain has to attend to. Admiral Starke’s
involved. We could also loose the Captain to ComSubPac awhile. Sparks?
Try to get through to the Admiral at the White House.”
“Aye sir.”
“Chief?”Morton furrowed his brows, thinking, “I’ve changed my mind.
Have Ski pilot instead of second seat, and
have him pack a bag, just in case.”
“But Kowalski’s never, I mean, er… he’s never….er…yes sir,”
Sharkey furrowed his brows, surprised. Ski was, like he and only a handful of
men, certified to fly the damn thing, but to his knowledge, nobody but the
Captain, Admiral and Morton had any real experience as the contraption’s
‘captain’.
***
“Take the
stick? By myself? This
some kind of test,” Chief?” Ski strapped himself into the pilot’s seat
after stowing his hastily packed duffel.
“You got your quals
don’t you?”Sharkey quit his musing.“ Just do your job,
understood?”
“Oh that’s just swell! What if I fall into an uncontrolled dive, or blast us up into
the stratosphere, or maybe,” he gulped, “scratch the paint..”
“You won’t scratch the paint, but if
you do, just think how nice the Skipper’s baby will look like red…”
Ski cringed. It was an ongoing
battle between Nelson and Crane as to what color the little craft should be.
“Okay okay, but don’t blame me if we
have an accident.”
“You won’t have an accident. He’s gonna’ be right there next to you if there’s any trouble.
There ain’t no better pilot
for her than the Skip.”
“Then why am I stuck with it?”
“Cause Mr. Morton said so. Wanna’ complain to him about it?”
“Er, no,
Chief, no…I’ll do it. I won’t like it, but I’ll do it.”
***
Patterson walked into the Control
Room from the aft hatch a little while later, with Crane’s duffel and garment
bag in hand.
A couple of men whistled at the
dress whites inside the clear plastic as he passed by. “Very well, Pat,” Morton
said, “ go ahead and stow his stuff below.”
Just then Lee appeared at the aft
hatch, freshly shaved, hair combed, and looked almost presentable. Except for
those tell tale dark circles under the reddened eyes.
“Lee,” Morton said gently as Crane
joined him near the flying sub’s hatch, “I just wanted you know how very sorry
I am. If you need anything… anything, I’m here for you.”
“I know you are… I’ll send Ski back
right away.”
“Actually, he could give you a
helping hand…”
“Well, I’ll think about it,”Crane took one last look back at the Control Room,
then, “you have command Mr. Morton.”
“I have command, aye sir,” he said as Patterson and the Chief emerged from the access
hatch.
“Flying sub all checked out and
ready to launch,” Sharkey said smartly.
For a moment Lee stood still,
immobile, as if he were lost, almost like a little boy trying to find his way
home. Then he nodded, rather sadly and climbed
down the ladder into the Flying Sub’s belly.
“Ski, what are you doing there?”
Crane asked, surprised, as soon as he saw the crewman in his normal seat.
“Mr. Morton said I was supposed to
pilot…but if you’d rather…”he added hopefully, unsure if the Captain was angry
or had a nervous tick.
“Very well,” Crane said at last, to
Ski’s surprise, “I am a bit tired. Thanks.”
***
“I’m sorry sir,” Sparks relayed to
Morton a short time later, “they won’t interrupt the President’s dinner party
unless it’s an emergency…I’m sure the Admiral will contact us as soon as he
gets the message that ComSubPac stole the Skipper….”
“It wasn’t official, Sparks, only
implied.”
“Let’s hope so. I don’t like the
idea of of him stuck behind some desk.”
“Me neither Sparks, me neither.”
***
“Looks like we have visitors,
Skipper, ” Ski pointed through the view ports. Base
Ops had arranged the secure hangar slip and marine guards stood pointing as
they waited for the men to emerge from the still top secret craft in the early
morning light.
“Well, make sure you give them a
proper show when you leave, Ski.”
“Uh…”the crewman’s protective instincts took over. He’d seen the Skipper’s eyes. “There’s
always a bunch of stuff to go through when
somebody dies…and what about Admiral Starke? I mean…you’re a sub skipper not a
‘go-fer’ I can help.”
“You know the saying about
volunteering don’t you?”
“Of course sir, er…”
Ski said.
“Consider yourself drafted. By the
way, you did a good job as pilot.”
“I did?”
“You did. I suggest, however, you
make sure we’re wearing space suits the next time you decide to take us into
orbit.”
“Uh, yeah, that was kinda…awkward. Even if it did only last a couple a minutes
before you got us back down…”
“You go on ahead to Admiral Starke’s
office. He’s sure to have something from the motor pool here waiting to take us
there, but I have my own transportation I keep
parked at the base marina. I want to check on Joe’s dog, I don’t know if
Admiral Starke’s arranged anything for her yet. Then I need to see the base
lawyers. I’ll meet you at the Admiral’s later.”
***
“What do you mean he’s not with
you?” Starke complained as the crewman reported to Starke’s office. “He’ll be
here soon enough I guess. Over there, that’s Jackson’s office. Start removing
and sort through his personal things. You can use the mail crates until you get
some boxes. Ignore the file cabinets, they’re official. By the way, know any
shorthand?”
“Er…”
“Never
mind. Get to work. I’ll be at a meeting
for the next hour or so. I hope Crane’s here by then. Answer the phone calls
and take any messages.”
“Aye sir.”
***
Starke still hadn’t returned from
his meeting when a god awful noise shook the windows. It was Crane, Ski
noticed, but he’d pulled up in a motorcycle of questionable vintage complete
with sidecar. But what was most unusual was that the sidecar was occupied by a
Golden Retriever. A Golden retriever wearing matching goggles
and helmet identical to Crane’s.
***
“I’m sorry to hear that, Chip,”
Nelson spoke from the videophone in Morton’s cabin.
“He'd been crying,
I'm sure of it, tried to hide it, though.”
“Yes, I suppose he would… I've only met Jackson a few times. Mostly
years ago. In fact the stories I could tell you about Ensigns Crane and
Jackson.... they're very close, Chip. And Jackson was a part time spook,sometimes his partner in
crime. So they have a much stronger bond than we
mere mortals.”
“I wish you could have been here,
sir. I tried to help but..he wanted to be left
alone. ”
“He's going to need time. To accept
his loss, to grieve. Going to be difficult for
him, I don't think Jackson had any living family...”
“So Lee’s all he had...to change the
subject, what about Starke drafting him for aide duty?”
“I really
rather doubt that Lee has any intention of wearing a gold braid on his
shoulder. But to be on the safe side, I'll
handle Jiggs, even if I have to do it by phone. These
blasted meetings are taking longer than I'd like.”
***
“Yes, I think that’s about it,
except for the desk, ” Lee said as he used a key around his neck to unlock it,
then saw his crewman's confused look, “it's an ONI thing. Stark knows about it.
Even if he gave Joe hell about our 'extracurricular activities,”he
chuckled at first then furrowed his brows. “For a few minutes after I got the
message I checked with them to see if it was some kind of assignment...but,” he
paused. “As soon as we're done here, I need to go to the base hospital. ”
“Hospital?”
“I’m hoping maybe I can identify
something from…his body…without DNA, it's not official.”
“Incorrect,
Commander!” Admiral Starke intruded, entering
his office, “It was his car, the coroner said he estimated the same height,
same broken finger...you remember when you brought him back to me like
that...well, the Navy wants to get this thing over with and has authorized the
Death Certificate... there's too much unresolved paperwork clogging the system.
”
“I still want to see him.”
“You’ll only puke if you look at it.. There’s no other way to say this, I know you two were
friends, but there’s very little left…not even all of his…er…parts…Miss
me already girl?” he patted the dog who was wagging her tail furiously.
“You’ve been the one taking
care of her?”
“What do you find so strange about
that? Of course I have. At least I can keep her fed and watered before
turning her into the Animal Shelter for adoption.”
“I’m taking her back to Santa
Barbara with me.”
“I don’t see you as the dog type,
Crane. Besides you can’t exactly keep her aboard Seaview.”
“I’ve no doubt someone at NIMR will be glad to take her in.If
not, I’ll take her home to my mother.”
“Seems like you’ve got it all
figured out…Kolowski? Get me some coffee. This
stuff's cold.”
“His name's Ko-wal-ski,” Lee corrected. “And he’s under no obligation to
fetch and carry for you whatsoever.”
“Well, you are, Commander smarty pants, as a Reserve junior officer. I might be forced
to keep my grubby hands off of you as an interim aide, as Harriman so
succinctly put it, but I'll be damned if an underling is going to argue about a
cup of coffee! Had enough problems with Jackson lecturing me
on his job description. Speaking of Jackson, you do realize don't you that
a military funeral is out of the question. Budget cuts. So hurry up and decide
what you want to do with him. Hope you won't plan anything too elaborate. I
have a lot of pressing matters to attend to and my calendar's pretty booked.”
“You're excused. I…I guess I’ll be
scattering his ashes on Kuwai. We used to go hiking there, near the lighthouse...I'll do it tomorrow. Ski, you
can leave these files. I'll have an agent from ONI collect them. I'm going to
the morgue.”
“I wouldn't recommend it Crane, but
if you're determined,” Starke sighed, “ I'll order up
a car.”
***
The Mo urge smelled of antiseptic.
The medical examiner’s assistant pulled the remains of the accident victim out
from the wall of refrigerated cubicles, and removed the sheet.
Lee almost swooned as he took in the
charred, almost skeletal remains of what was left of his brother in all but
name. Starke’s warnings had done little to prepare Lee for this. He felt quite
ill. Then convincing himself he had to do this, Lee took the remnant of Joe’s
right hand, and felt along the little finger.
“Oh gawd,
it is him…it is him…” his last lingering hope
that it was all some terrible mistake vanished, taunting him with the finality
of it all.
“Here,” the assistant half pulled
half dragged Crane to the wastebasket as he began to gag then throw up.
“I warned you,” Starke
stood well back leaning against the door.
“I…I had to be sure…”he
vomited again.
Kowalski couldn't blame
the Skipper his illness, as
he saw the burnt skull, and severed
bones of what had once been a man. And the Skipper’s friend.
Finding an inner strength he didn’t know was there, the crewman approached
Crane, who had stopped vomiting but was still groaning.
“I’ll take care of him now,” Ski
pre-empted Starke,“C’mon
Skip. Let’s go back and take Sandy home..”
“Wait…I…want…I need to talk to
him…alone…”
“Are you daft man?” Starke demanded.
“Take your crewman's advice. You’ll just puke
all over again.”
“Get out!” Lee roared, “Leave me
alone!”
“I'll be right outside Skipper,” Ski
said gently to which Crane nodded.
“Hmph,
order me around will you Crane, Harry will hear of this!”
“He didn't mean anything by it sir,”
Ski ushered Starke toward the door, “Just needs a little time for...uh...”he
looked at the assistant inquiringly.
“Closure.”
“Yeah, closure,” Starke and the
assistant preceded him out of the door, but not before Ski
took
a backward glance and saw Crane speaking to the body, calmly at first, but then
leaning against the tray, his eyes moist, and brushing his fingers gently against
the skull’s forehead.
***
“I see,” Morton said as Ski used the
pay phone outside of the lounge to reach Seaview and inform the XO about
everything, “Scatter his ashes? Tomorrow?”
Morton asked from the radio shack, “Do you think he can handle it? I see. No,
no word on when the Admiral can leave Washington. I see…damn…do your best to
keep an eye on him…by the way, scanners had FS1 nearly in orbit....Look, Ski,
see that he has some dinner and goes to bed…You’ll be staying there with the
Captain overnight. If he complains tell him the order's from me. Golden Retriever? Well, I’m not sure…I’ll check around… Yes
Ski, thanks for calling…keep me posted…Seaview out.”
For a moment after the call ended
and Chip returned the private line phone to Sparks, Chip said nothing, then whispered morosely to himself, “Oh Lee, Lee,
Lee…”
“Is the Skipper okay?” Sharkey
gulped.
“No, Chief. Not by a long
shot…”Morton pursed his lips and made a decision. “Frank? We're aborting the
mission. Lay in a course for Pearl Harbor. Flank speed. We’re not going to let
the Skipper suffer like this all by himself, not if I
have anything to say about it. Sparks, get me the White House. Tell them…it’s
an emergency.”
***
“Skipper, you really should eat
something,” Ski poured out some kibble for the dog.
“I don't care what Morton told you,
enough of the mother henning”
Crane headed to the liquor cabinet.
“Sorry sir...uh, that's whiskey.”
“So, I need to get drunk, okay?” Lee
was about to open the pristine bottle.
“But Skipper,” Ski’s mind was in overdrive.
His job was to look after the Captain not let him inebriate himself, “What
would Commander Jackson think if you were all well, hungover
when you say goodbye to him tomorrow? That’s what you planned isn’t it? Way up
to the top of that sea cliff? Kind of a long hike you said...only the
park services have the little golf carts....”
Crane had told him of outcrop on Kauai. The view was spectacular and the
almost constant breeze an ideal setting for scattering someone’s
ashes…especially since there wouldn’t be a funeral and Starke was persona non
grata.
“Skipper?”
Damn if the man didn’t look like he
was expecting to be keel hauled at dawn.
“Okay okay…you win,” he put the
bottle back. “I’m going to bed.”
“It's only 1600 and we got hot dogs...You’ll need all your strength
tomorrow.”
“Are you going to pester me the
whole time we’re here? I...I'm sorry, Ski,” he plopped down on the sofa, and
stared at the boxes stuffed to the gills with personal items. “Okay, make mine
with ketchup, nothing else, oh, maybe some butter on the buns...”
“Aye sir.”
As Ski microwaved
the franks, he related small tidbits about this picture and that as he
retrieved them from the boxes, and even shared a particularity ribald story
from their early years as the crewman joined him for the meal, all the while
listening raptly to Crane reminisce.
***
It was getting stormy. Picking up
the urn from the hastily arranged crematorium, Lee placed it gently in the
sidecar of his motorcycle and headed to the motor ferry to take him to the island
of Kauai, after convincing Ski that he wanted to do this alone.
But Ski knew and Crane knew Ski knew, he just didn't want to risk tears in public.
In stark contrast to his antiquated
rust bucket, he was resplendent in dress whites, causing more than a few heads
on the ferry to turn. If anyone wanted begin a conversation, they were pretty
much dissuaded when they saw ‘McInty's Crematorium’
stamped on the urn. Leaving the man in peace, it wasn’t long before the ferry
docked and folks dispersed to the various attractions, by vehicle and by foot.
He didn't have to hike the
trail as expected; some rangers, spotting the Naval officer and his
urn, easily figuring out yet another person that wanted his ashes spilled
out atop the cliff, offered him a lift on their golf cart to the outcrop.
Giving him their sympathies then
leaving, he stood in deep contemplation, the breeze ruffling his hair, the
sounds of gulls in air and the sea below. The two had often spoken about
what they wanted when the Grim Reaper claimed their lives. Ashes were simply
ashes after all. But despite what he'd told himself, it was going to be hard to
just ‘throw him away.”
Suddenly the sound of golf carts and
shuffling feet behind him, alerted him to the fact that he was no longer alone.
“Atten-shun!”
Morton’s voice shouted as he saw almost the entire compliment of the Seaview,
including Kowalski. They must have moored her on the other side of the island.
Maybe Joe couldn’t have an official
military send off, but it was 'close enough for government work' as he’d have
joked himself, had he been there.
Chip moved toward Lee and stood
beside him, waiting for Lee to make the first move. He could see a myriad of
emotions in Lee's eyes. Gratitude and pride in his
men coupled with the sadness in what he had to do.
Lee bowed his head, then with a nod
to Chip who ordered all hands to salute, Lee scattered the last vestige of what
had been his friend up into the air and over the cliff to the sea below.
“Chip…I…I
don’t know what to say, how to thank you…” Lee finally managed after a few
minutes.
“A good submarine officer uses his
initiative when warranted.”
“But…ohmygod…you
aborted the mission? Does Nelson know?”
“He does now,” Nelson surprised
them, thanking another batch of rangers for the lift, “Saw Seaview
on final approach to Honolulu. Had a whale of time
getting a ferry from Honolulu over here. Had to use my influence and call in a
favor from 5-O for a police boat. Will be expecting two dinner guests
later...As for Morton's change of my charting mission, well,
considering the circumstances, we’ll let it slide…how are you Lee?”
Morton took the unspoken hint from Nelson,dismissed and herded the
crew back down the trail in the waiting golf carts and on foot, down to
the dock and Seaview's waiting zodiacs.
“I wish I could have been here for
you Lee,”Nelson began, knowing his words wouldn’t
help.
Lee’s eyes were only on the empty urn, reminding him of his loss.
“Lee?”
“I…I…”Crane fought a loosing battle against the tears that began to flow and he
collapsed to his knees in anguish.
Nelson was on the ground beside him
immediately, pulling Lee against his shoulder,
and held him there, letting him sob against his chest, and rocking him gently.
It may have been a private moment,
but not far enough way for more than a few faces to witness the two, like a
father and son, in a moment of compassion and surrender.
***
“The coffee’ll
be ready soon,” Ski said.
“Thanks,” Crane took off his shoes
and socks and placed them in the adjoining laundry/mud room off the kitchen,
the cloudburst having drenched he and Nelson before
they could return to the ferry's dock.
Just then the doorbell rang.
“I'll get it Ski...Admiral Starke?
What are you doing here?”
“Seaview’s offshore of Kauai. I thought you said she was off on a charting mission! At least that’s the excuse Harriman gave me when I asked for her services. Good God
man, you’re soaking wet. Go dry off those curls; you look like a girl. Kowlowski, is that coffee I smell? Well, what’s the matter?
Cat got your tongue? Can't I at least ask for some here? Please?”
“Heavens, is that you?” Starke
picked up an open scrapbook on the littered coffee table.
“Busting regs
when it suited you? Even middies on leave have rules,” Starke snorted just look
at that hair!”
“It was High School,” Lee
sighed.
“You and Jackson go back that
far?”
“No; it must be something my mother
shared with him when he visited,” Lee took the scrapbook out of his hands and
rather pointedly closed it and took it back to the coffee table.
“Now, if you don’t mind, just
what was it you wanted, sir?”
“I thought it was obvious. I want
Seaview. There’s a war game in a few days, and I’d like her to be my observation
platform…”
“Sorry Jiggs,”
Nelson appeared, showered and changed. “She’s unavailable.”
“Whatever you're doing, it can wait,
surely!”
“Jiggs…”
“Then at least change your mind
about Crane for a few weeks. I need someone with a bit more sense than the file
clerks that I’m left with…”
“Honestly Jiggs,
using the Captain of the Seaview as an aide? Besides, he’s on leave. The whole
crew is.”
“We are?” Ski whispered.
“You are are
now, apparently,” Lee replied.
“Ski, I called a cab for you, should
be here soon. I'll take care of him now,” he whispered.”
“I heard that!”
“Then you won't mind that he should
be enjoying shore leave with his friends, not babysitting you. Now for the
first order of business, “you’ll catch your death in this air conditioning wet
like that. Go ahead and clean up, the water’s probably hot again by now. I’ll
entertain our guest.”
Kowalski glanced at Crane nervously.
“It's okay Ski,” Crane acquiesced.
“Have a good time...and thanks.”
“I'll get my stuff,” he hurried to
the guest room.
“What are you waiting for Crane,”
Starke said, “you’re making puddles on the carpet. Not a good impression for
the dog. ”
“If you need anything…” Ski
returned.
“Your cab's here,” Starke held the
window curtains open by the door.
“You heard him,” Nelson said,
“Scram, have a good time. You,” he pointed to Lee, the bathroom's
that way.”
“Pick pick pick,”
Lee grinned, nodded to the retreating Ski and headed down the hallway.
***
“Jiggs,”
Nelson fumed, “what are you doing?”
“Well, I don't see anything labeled
Top Secret, do you?” he lifted out scrapbook after scrapbook, picture after
picture...then, “Harriman, look at this…”
“Presidential
Citation?”
“More than one...Jackson never told
me.”
“And you never delved deeper into
his service record either I suppose.”
Starke began to laugh, picking out a
small yellowed photograph of a baby.“Well, it’s
certainly not Joe,” Starke snorted and handed it to Nelson.
It was the proverbial photo of a nude baby on a bear skin rug, well,
actually a white fluffy towel, his soft baby behind for all to see. It was
stamped 'Sate Orphanage', and handwritten, 'male,#777,
hazel eyes.'
“The Captain of the Seaview in his
birthday suit on a bear skin rug, “Starke mused, “but why on earth would
Jackson have it?”
“I suppose because it’s the sort of
stuff brothers keep, Jiggs.”
“Here’s a couple of letters…”
“Wait…I don’t think we should be
going through any more of this…”
“It’s from Crane….
Dear
Joe,
I
have a couple of minutes so I’m writing (actually using Spark's typewriter,
typos and all) to ask if you’re still having nightmares. I can’t get rid of
mine. Almost woke up the whole boat. Sure wish I could tell someone, anyone,
about what really happened when we ‘went missing’ on that shore leave.
But
by the time my watch began, I was hardly trembling anymore except for spilling
my coffee on some charts. Not the kind of thing to win friends and influence
the XO.I chalked it up to a tennis injury, but the Chief knew, the XO knew, the
crew knew and I knew something was up.
That
wouldn’t have been so bad if the Skipper hadn’t gotten a wire from ONI and
ordered not to let anyone ask any questions if I started to act ‘strange.’
Otherwise
I’m enjoying myself aboard this boat, I enjoy all subs, and while I always knew
I had a knack for submarines, I feel pretty vindicated now that I have my
dolphins.
How
is ONI? You know, part of me is a envious that you
transferred to the Agency full time. I'll be little more than a 'echo machine' and ‘go fer’ till
I get command one day. Still, I had my choice to opt out to be a full time
agent too. But I can’t help feeling I’m destined for something a bit
more-well-traditional n the Navy.
By
the way, Mom would love to have you come out for Christmas again if we can both
get leave, that is. She keeps pestering me about how I
should try to be like you. Little does she know the ‘office’ you work at isn’t
pushing pencils but playing James Bond. God help us if
she ever finds out I do to, even on a part time basis.
Well,
my watch begins soon, and this typewriter ribbon is about gone.
All
for now bro,
Lee
Just then Sandy perked up and the
men quickly shoved the items back into the box. By the time Crane emerged in
some rather ancient Academy sweats he was none the wiser.
***
“You sure this stuff is for real,
Ski?”Cookie asked over the pulled pork and poi in one of Pearl Harbor’s seedier joints.
“You’ve had eats in Pearl before.
I’m telling you, my brother Stan said you couldn’t do better than if you had a
real luau back in the days of King Kamehameha at this
place....”then he went pale
“Hey what's the matter kid?” Sharkey
asked, “Food poisoning?”
“Oh gawd...no..no...no...”he shook his head and
pointed.
“So?It's just a hula dancer.”
“Next to her…,” Ski rose, “C'mon.”
***
“Tell me about him, Lee,” Nelson
said as he sat next to Crane on the sofa. Starke had already left, and Lee was
looking maudlin, staring at one of the old photos
taken of he and Joe on their motorcycles.
“He…what I ever did to deserve his
friendship? Even my Mom treated him like my long lost brother…”Lee’s eyes began
to moisten.
“Go on.”
“He hated me at first sight, did you
know that? And I couldn’t stand him,” Lee chuckled, “He took his hazing duties
toward us plebes seriously. Me especially..”
“I'm confused, Lee. I thought you both were in the same class at the
Academy. Roommates even.”
“That didn’t happen until a bad
water pipe made one of the wings unlivable for awhile. So some of the
‘Youngster’s were drafted to accommodate us soaked swabbies,
even if it meant us using sleeping bags on their nice clean floors. Believe me,
my toothbrush spent far more time on his ‘nice clean deck’ than in the head. Of
course, by then I knew to purchase my toothbrushes by the gross…” Lee’s face
softened as the memories began to come spilling out.
***
“Mr. Morton?” the deck watch called down, “Mr. O’Brien’s back.”
“Right there,” Chip checked his
wallet, not sure if he should go for some eats on his own, to pick up some take
out for Lee. Nelson was sure to have things well in hand with Lee now but
still...
Lee, he mused with pride. There was no doubting his look of appreciation toward Chip and the crew
as they'd stood to attention behind him on the outcrop. But he'd wanted more.
More like what Lee had with Nelson, well, maybe not quite that close, theirs'
was more of a father/son relationship, but couldn't Lee have the same kind of
friendship he'd had for Jackson with him?
Brought back to the present by Lt.
O’Brien’s snappy salute, Morton turned the conn over
to him and headed to one of the more well known Chinese take outs.
***
“So you demanded ‘satisfaction’
since he hazed you about your looks?” Nelson asked,
aghast, leaning back in the sofa.
“I was young and stupid, okay? I was
just so darn tired of always having been judged by my face. All my life! I
thought my shaved head would have stopped it outright, or afterwards the buzz
cut, but he when he called me a ‘pretty boy’ for
the nth time I snapped. Don’t get me wrong; I expected and understood the whys
and wherefores of hazing. If it was needed to point out something not polished,
something not remembered, etc, that was fine. But just because I was cursed with girly eyelashes? Just
didn’t seem fair to me. Since pistols at dawn was out
of the question, the boxing ring was the only way to battle it out. And I
wanted an apology. The stakes were that if he
won, I wouldn’t say another word about it. But if I won,
he’d not only apologize publicly, he'd quit referring to my looks in a
derogatory way….”
“And?”
“We reserved the ring and by the
time the match began, word was out so practically everyone was there, even some
instructors, the coach too...”
“Well, go on.”
“I came away from our little
makeshift match with a couple of black eyes, two cracked ribs and a super
deflated ego. I was just going to have to put up with being referred to as the
‘pretty boy' for my entire remaining 4 years. But you know,” Lee's eyes
softened, “he never called me that again.”
“Is that about when you got
interested in boxing?”
“Hell no. Wasn’t interested in it at all.
Actually I hate the sport. But I was determined not to land on my arse again. So I pestered the coach to try out for
the boxing team. He was aghast to say the least,
I wasn't even a lightweight. But he said he'd give me 6 weeks to add a few
pound and to get into shape before the next tryouts. So when he asked for
volunteers to be my practice sparring partners,
well, there was only one...and I think you know the rest of the story…”
“Surely not…”
“It was the beginning of a long and
beautiful friendship. Too bad neither of us knew it at the time,” he chuckled, “ but we got along tolerably well even if he bugged me to
death with second servings of potatoes and ice cream. We really didn’t hit if
off until we both ended up in the wrong place and the wrong time and,” he
paused, “learned all about how not to be James Bond, even if we caught
the attention of ONI. Anyway, that's another story...”he sighed, “Those were
the days.…sir, if you don’t mind I think I’ll head on over to Seaview, check a
few things,” and was out the door before even Sandy could wag her tail goodbye.
***
Lee climbed down into Seaview after
having been piped aboard by Lt. O’Brien. Refusing the conn,
Crane was observed by the few men on boat sitting
duty absently run his hands over some of the consoles on the way to the
Observation Nose. They had to grin. It was as habitual to him as brushing his
teeth.
The lights from the dock cast an almost festive glow through the
view ports. Even his friend had joked about Lee’s delay in bringing him over to
see ‘the wife’. Even with the best of intentions
and invitations, it had never happened. Life and duty just always got in the
way. And now, it was gone.
Sighing, he scrounged around
Nelson’s liquor cabinet for a little sustenance and recognized a dusty bottle
of Tahitian 'Brandy' that Nelson had had aboard Nautilus. He’d said it wasn’t
really brandy, but a fermented ‘frog juice’ that
would put hair on his chest but that neither he nor Nelson had been brave or
stupid enough to put it to the test.
Nelson had given him carte blanch to
the cabinet almost since the day Lee had snuck aboard for his top secret and
soon not to be just temporary assignment. Good as time as any to take him
up on it.
***
“Chip, good to see you!” Nelson
welcomed him at the door, the cab driving off. “Mmm. That smells good.”
“I know Lee likes Chinese so...I
thought I'd ask you to join me.”
“You just missed him. He's gone down
to Seaview. He’s okay but he’s been a bit maudlin. It’s okay Sandy, we’re just
taking your uncle his dinner,” Nelson ushered Morton back out the door, “Can
you ride a motorcycle? There's a spare in the garage.”
“Hell no...”
“Well, I watched Lee as he drove
that monstrosity of his...can't be all that difficult. Even
if this one doesn't have a sidecar.”
***
“That was quick sirs,” O’Brien,
topside, welcomed the XO and Admiral back
aboard, despite their ride in the patrol car, Jackson's motorcycle lashed
to the back.
“And next time remember,” the
driver's officer warned, “you need a license as a motorcycle operator,”
then ripped up the ticket he was going to have given Nelson as the other
officer removed the bike and handed the handlebar to him.
“Er,
yes...it was kind of urgent...”
Morton took the vehicle and motioned
the Jr. Officer to take charge of it as he waved goody to the fleeing car.
“What the heck's that racket?”Nelson
asked as he approached the hatch, the musical whining from the belly of the
sub.
“The Beach
Boys music festival. It's on
all the radio stations.”
“It's loud enough to burst the
eardrums! Turn it off.”
“Uh, that might be difficult.”
“Why?” Morton asked, “Why's it
difficult?”
“Well, you see sir,
you'll have to ask the Skipper. He turned it on.”
Nelson raised an eyebrow. To
his knowledge only Riley like surfer music. He quickly
climbed down the ladder, followed by Morton.
Lee had indeed enjoyed the Tahitian
Brandy, the empty bottle rolling on the deck with the sub’s gentle sway on the
surface, and what looked like a nearly empty bottle of Whiskey in his
hand as he crooned along, twirling around and around in the swivel lounger.
Just then O'Brien summoned Nelson
back topside to handle a 'situation'.
“Oh, there you are Chipee!” Crane finally noticed his presence “Join me for a drinky?”
Chipee? Morton
raised a surprised eyebrow.
“Was going to have Joe
over...” Lee slurred, “now’s too late…please don’t die on me too Chippee! Please don’t you an’ Harry die on me…”he grabbed
Morton’s arm. “Promise me...Promise meee....”
“All right Lee, I promise.”
“Chip,” Nelson approached, ,interrupting, “We have a…situation…haven't you turned
that damn noise off yet?”
“Shhh!
Here comes the best part!” Lee shouted, “And she’ll have fun fun fun when her daddy takes the
T-bird awayaayyyy….”he sang, twirling around again.
Leaving Lee to his song, Morton
followed Nelson into the Control Room as Kowalski
and his pals climbed down the ladder, all the while pushing and grabbing a man,
in Hawaiian shirt and Bermudas down with them.
“Chip,”Nelson
said, bemused, “I don’t believe you’ve met Lt. Cmdr. Joe Jackson.”
“What’s the meaning of this,
Admiral?” Jackson complained. “I was practically kidnapped by your men and
dragged here! Don’t get me wrong, while I’d like to see
Lee’s boat, I surely would, this is not the way I want to be piped
aboard! When he finds out how badly you’ve mishandled me….is that Lee??” he
added as Lee wailed about the T-Bird.
“Lee’s not quite.... himself,” Chip
said.
“Not himself, he’s sloshed! What the
hell have you done to him?” Jackson was about to hurry toward the nose, but was
waylaid by Nelson as he pressed the button to close the accordion pleats.
“No. You’d better let Chip speak to
him first…you’re bound to be a shock. And I'd like some answers Mister. And right now.”
***
“Chippeeee,”
Lee raised another drink, “you missed the best part!”
“I’m sorry Lee…uh…I need to tell you
something…”
“Did I get it wrong? And how’d she
have fun when her daddy took the T-bird away?”
“Lee, about Joe…”
“Ba ba ba ba
Barbara Ann,” Lee sang with the radio. “Ba ba ba ba
Barbara Ann…”
Morton sighed and pushed the button
to open the pleats, to face a sour faced Jackson and a concerned Nelson.
“It’s no good, he’s too sloshed.”
“Not for me,” Jackson headed to
Crane.
“No!” Lee nearly screamed,cringing, “We’re not at the 16th
parallel! We’re not at the 16th parallel! Are we?” he asked in a
confused stupor.
“Lee, it’s all right,” Morton knelt
beside him, ‘he’s no ghost. He's your friend. He’d never possess you. ”
“But…I ….I saw him at the morgue…all
burnt up, in pieces. He’s dead,” Lee furrowed his eyebrows, and looked Jackson
square in the face, “Why aren’t you in Heaven?”he whined.
“Lee,”it
was Joe’s turn to kneel beside him, “Listen to me buddy. It’s me, truly it is.
I loaned my apartment and car to Kyle for a few days, you remember him. He
must've already packed up his things before the accident. I didn’t know
anything about it till Nelson told me a few minutes ago..I
was..partying before heading home...”
“No…'mposter…trick…go
away. Chippee, make him go awayyyy.”
Chipee? Nelson
raised a bemused eyebrow while the embarrassed Morton
simply patted Lee's arm.
“Lee, Look at me!” Joe
demanded, “Touch me! Feel me! Flesh and blood…”
“Go ahead lad,
Lad,”Nelson urged,
“It'll be all right.”
“We promise,” Chip added.
Lee hesitated but began to prod
Joe’s face and when convinced his hand wouldn’t go through it, began to try to
pull Jackson's shirt off one shoulder.
“What’s he doing?” Nelson whispered.
“Wants to see this,” Joe removed his shirt far enough down his arm to
reveal a garish tattoo.
“J…Joe? It’s really you?”
“Yeah, bro it’s me…”
“Why didn’t you tell me you
weren’t dead?” Lee whined, embracing him.
“I didn’t know I was …I told you all
about Kyle it in my letter. Don’t you remember
it?”
“Wha...Letter?”
Lee furrowed his brows.
“I gave it to Starke on my way
out...”
“Never got…”
“Oh gawd,”
Jackson rose, “don't tell me he got it mixed up and it’s floating around in the
interoffice mail instead of the US Mail...Lee, I’m so sorry you had to go
through all this…”
“You’re not kidding,”Morton
huffed, angry.
“Look, Chippee…”Jackson
said.
“That’s Chip to you. Or Commander. If you’re as good a friend as Lee seems
to think, I’d have thought you would have spoken to him about your plans long
before now…”
“Look, Morton…”
“Don’t patronize me! Do you have any
idea what you put him through?”
“I didn’t know I was supposed to be
dead! And don’t you tell me I’m not his friend. His best
friend. Even if all I ever hear is 'Morton this' and 'Nelson that'. I
swear he even has delusions of the Admiral's godhood!”
“That’s enough!” Nelson interrupted,
“good grief, this is Lee you're arguing over! He’s certainly allowed to
have more than one friend, or best friend, and certainly more than one brother!”
Lee was happily ignoring them,
wailing at the top of his voice, “She’s my little deuce coupe! You don’t know
what I got…“So happy….” he slurred, grinning at them and hiccuped.
“Gentlemen,” I believe it’s time we
put Lee to bed.”
***
If the few crew aboard noticed their
inebriated Captain being half dragged, half carried to his cabin by Jackson and
Morton while Nelson called Starke, they tried their damnedest not to give
any indication. Even if Seaview was beginning to smell like a
cheap bar in his wake.
“So happy, Chipee,” Lee allowed Morton to push him down on the bunk
and remove his shoes.
“Yes Lee, now close your eyes and go
to sleep.”
“Not seeeepy,”
he yawned.
“Do it anyway.”
“Lee,” Jackson began, fluffing the
pillow, even if Lee's eyes were closed, “I really am sorry about the mix up.”
“Hmph!”
Morton snorted.
Just as Jackson’s hand was about
tousle Lee's hair, Morton's beat him to it.
“So,” Jackson said, “you do that
too, do you Morton?”
“No,” Chip said, surprised by his
actions, “I never have. It just seemed…like the right thing to do.”
“Yeah, there’s a lot of 'doing the
right thing' with Lee in your life. He…needs
looking after some times,” Jackson paused, “you know, you'd better make sure
nothing ever happens to you and Nelson. He'd be devastated. In fact, I'm not
sure he'd be able to go on, even if he may not know how much he loves you.”
“He was pretty devastated thinking
you were dead…”
“Kowalski told me about what you did,
bringing Seaview here for a military send off…”
“You deserved a military funeral.”
“That’s not why. You love him too,”
Jackson pulled up a chair to sit next to the bunk.
“Yeah,” Chip pulled up the other and
sat staring at Lee’s sleeping face.
“Looks like a cherub doesn’t he?”
“Oh hell, tell him that and he’ll
stuff you out a torpedo tube.”
“Yeah…or demand satisfaction…”
“Huh?”
“It was a long time ago…”
***
“Harriman,” Starke huffed “is this
necessary?” as Nelson escorted him toward the
Captain’s cabin, “It was an honest mistake. I'm used to delegating...”
“Tell that to Lee,” he opened the
semi closed door.
Crane was sound asleep in his
sweats, Morton was stretched out in one of the chairs, snoring, and Jackson in the other, equally somnolent.
“I suppose we'll have to wait until
tomorrow and leave the Brother’s Crane to their dreams.”
But startled,
Joe awoke, the chair toppling as he rose, “Uh…sir?”
“Admiral?” Chip stood, blinking the sleep out of his eyes.
“Admiral Starke has something he
wants to say to you both.”
“I believe this is Crane’s,” Starke
returned Joe’s unmailed letter to it's owner.
“Where was it?” Morton asked.
“Well?”Joe echoed.
“It...er... got lost in all the paperwork in my attache case...sorry. Won't happen again.
Well, not that that's settled, how about a midnight snack?”Starke said as he
led Nelson out.
“Sounds good to me,too,” Chip said as Jackson pulled up the askew
blanket up back over Lee.
“Me too, Chippee.
By the way, don't let the nickname get to you. You should hear what he calls
Nelson. Tell you later... ”
Just outside in the corridor, and
having overheard, Nelson spread his arms akimbo with a grin.
***
After a couple of helpings of ice
cream which needed no crew for preparation, Jackson and Starke were finally
taking their leave of Seaview, Morton already having said good night.
“So,” Starke asked Jackson, before
they climbed the ladder topside, “just what does Crane call Harriman?”
“Sorry sir, that's privileged
information,” he winked at Nelson and departed.
“Oh, let the boys have their sibling
secrets, Jiggs,”Nelson intervened.
“You know Harry, if those three are brothers what does that make you?”
“I think you know.”
“Yeah, you
lucky dog. My son's not half the man Crane
is.”
“Drive carefully Jiggs.
We'll talk tomorrow...maybe arrange something for that war game of yours.”
“Change of
heart?”
“No..it's
just the 'friend' thing to do.”
***
Later, when Nelson meandered down to
the Captain's cabin to check on Lee, he found Morton in pj's
and robe already parked back in his chair by Lee' s
bunk sound asleep.
Before pulling the other chair
opposite Lee's feet, he gently ran his own hand through Lee's curls, “Sleep well son...it's all better now...your
brother...your brothers, he corrected, aren't ‘gone’ any longer.”