decimated it.
“Call this 202 number,” Freeman told the quartermaster, “and tell them I’d like a C5-Galaxy, and I want it now because it’s the
The quartermaster scribbled down the 202 area code and number. “Who the hell is this?”
Freeman knew he could have told the Air Force officer outright, but he had to obey his own strictly imposed no-leak policy. “Call the number,” he told the quartermaster as they moved outside to the runway. “If you don’t, I’ll take this to SOCOM HQ, rattle your cage!”
The Air Force officer whipped out his cell, as Freeman later told his team, “quicker’n Wyatt Earp,” the quartermaster’s officiousness deflated like a slashed balloon. “Yes, ma’am!” Freeman heard him say, the quartermaster coming to attention as he spoke. “Yes — no problem. Right away.”
The quartermaster coughed, moving to nonchalantly slide his cell away, but missed his pocket, the cell phone striking hard on the MacDill runway. Freeman bent down and picked it up for him. “Thanks,” responded the quartermaster, his voice markedly subdued. “Ah — a Galaxy or Starlifter — whatever you want.”
“I’ll take the big bastard,” Freeman said amicably.
“Right. Galaxy it is, then.”
“Good.”
“Ah, General Freeman…”
“Yes?”
“Ms. Prenty wishes you Godspeed.”
Freeman nodded. It was the second time Eleanor had said that. He extended his hand in friendship to the young quartermaster general and smiled. “Thanks. I’ll need it.”
CHAPTER TWELVE
Once airborne in the huge Galaxy, Freeman went over his attack plan, every single detail, three times en route to Hawaii with his eight-man team. Aussie, Choir, Sal, Bone Brady, Johnny Lee, and Tavos would do the actual break and entry of the warehouse. Gomez and Mervyn would stay with the insertion vehicle, while Freeman, to his chagrin, but in obeisance to his Commander-in-Chief’s express order, would remain at mission control.
Landing on Oahu at dusk, the men, including the general, who set the example, ate a meal heavily laced with kimchi, the fermented Korean mix of cabbage, garlic, hot red peppers, green onions, and shrimp-fish paste that Koreans had as a side dish with every meal and was so strong that Aussie said it should be classified as a WMD. “Know a coupla guys,” he said between mouthfuls, “who are on the ‘speed bump.’ ” It was the name that the six hundred Americans and South Koreans who manned the first line of defense along Korea’s DMZ gave to Camp Bonifas on the DMZ. They would therefore be responsible for evacuating all noncombatants at Panmunjom in the event of invasion by the North.
“What about ’em?” asked Salvini, his normally open, congenial Brooklyn smile contorted by the sour cabbage mash.
“Well,” answered Aussie, pausing to wash down the kimchi with a gulp of North Korean Dear Leader beer, “they say no matter how horny they get, they’d rather jerk off than try to bed someone with kimchi breath!”
Freeman was remembering his embarrassing moment with Margaret. Onions! Maybe that’s why he’d been obsessed with onions, an unconscious warning to him to make sure that his attack team would eat only Korean food before the attack, more than one American killed because of his North American smell on the wind.
“I believe it,” said Gomez. “I couldn’t go near a kimchi breath.”
“I’d rather screw Choir,” joshed Aussie.
“Nah,” said Sal, “he’s too tight!”
Chief Petty Officer Tavos shook his head. “You guys!”
“Okay, boys,” cut in the general. “Listen up. Our senior boat man, Mervyn here, is about to take us through a refresher of Zulu-Five Oscar techniques.”
“No need,” joked Aussie. “Just drop out of this big bird, run, and fart. North Koreans comin’ for you get a whiff of that kimchi burst and
All of them had had to commit key Korean terms to memory, the ability to be “superfast studies,” superfast learners, especially of foreign languages, now being mandatory for all Spec War applicants, and not just Green Berets. It was an ability aided in no small degree by Lieutenant Johnny Lee’s expert knowledge of Mandarin, Cantonese, and five other languages, which included Korean — one of the reasons Freeman chose him — as well as Japanese, French, Russian, and a dialogue spoken by the Sakhalin Islanders who, as part of the Kuril Island chain north of Japan, had been occupied alternately by Japan and Russia during the last century.
Before Lee took over from Eddie Mervyn, going over useful evasive phrases, Aussie asked him, “What’s Korean for ‘I would like some pussy’?”
“Don’t worry about it, Aussie,” Freeman assured him. “You won’t have time.”
Johnny Lee told him anyway—
Freeman smiled. Great morale here, he thought; together with surprise it was the essential ingredient for success, as any football coach knew. A surge in morale could spring you a quick goal in the first few minutes, and knock the opposition right out of the game.
CHAPTER THIRTEEN
Arturo Omura, his wife, and his thirteen-year-old grandson had worked hard to make a living ever since Grandfather Omura had immigrated to the United States in 1936. Grandfather had always been a prescient man, and in 1934 had predicted war was coming with America because, he said, Japan’s war minister Tojo’s unsmiling face, cruel enough by itself and looking even crueler because of the rimless spectacles he wore, was the face of a man bent on conquest.
Already the Japanese armed services, long emboldened by their stunning naval victory over the supposedly great Russian fleet at the Battle of the Tsushima Strait in 1905, had wreaked havoc upon Russia’s army in the east, and Japan’s subsequent victory over Chiang Kai Shek’s Chinese Nationalist divisions of the Guomintang and against Mao Tse Tung’s Communist armies had enabled Nippon to seize the rich mineral resources of Manchuria. But Grandfather Omura had told his wife and grandson Tayama, that the nascent Japanese Empire was still not satisfied. Tojo and his gang of thugs, as Grandfather Omura had always described them, though only in private, were now looking south toward the rubber of Malaysia and the oil of the Dutch East Indies. And the only reason they had not invaded Malaya and the spice-rich East Indies, Grandfather explained, was because of the United States Navy, based in Hawaii, which could thwart any Japanese movement south of Japan, unless Japan were to knock out the American fleet in Pearl Harbor on the island of Oahu. Such talk scared Grandmother Omura because if anyone outside the family overheard and was to report it to the
Grandfather Arturo Omura had his wish fulfilled earlier than he’d anticipated. He, his wife, and his grandson, Tayama’s parents having died several years before, arrived in Honolulu in 1936, courtesy of the Kempei Tai who, having received a tip-off about Grandfather Omura from an Emperor-worshipping neighbor, then hatched a Machiavellian plan worthy of Vladimir Putin in his early days in the KGB.
Rather than sending Omura and his wife to prison in Japan for having criticized War Minister Tojo, the Kempei Tai set up Omura, his wife, and Tayama on Oahu in a little rice teriyaki stand several blocks from Pearl Harbor where U.S. sailors came ashore on leave en route to downtown Honolulu, which was then little more than the pink Royal Hawaiian Hotel with a cluster of smaller buildings spread along Waikiki Beach. The rice stall was