The Marine MP on duty outside the Navy Air Transport Service terminal eyed Galloway suspiciously as he pulled up in the yellow Ford.
"I've got two warm bodies inside," Galloway said when the MP walked up to the car. "Can I leave this here a minute?"
"No, Sir," the MP said. "That would be against regulations. But on the other hand, if I checked around inside, which would take me about two minutes, I wouldn't see it, would I?"
"Thanks," Charley said, and got out of the car.
He smiled when he saw the two warm bodies, the intrepid birdmen fresh from the States, sitting on wooden benches inside the terminal. He knew both of them.
And when they saw him, they both stood up. First Lieutenant James G. Ward, USMCR, smiled and waved. First Lieutenant David F. Schneider, USMC, just about came to attention.
If he outranked Jim Ward, Galloway thought, he would bark "attention" and announce that he was Lieutenant Schneider reporting for duty as ordered with a party of one."
"Welcome to sunny Hawaii," Galloway said, extending his hand. "How was the flight?"
"Long," Jim Ward said.
"Very nice, thank you, Sir," Lieutenant Schneider said.
Oh, that's the way he's decided to play this. He probably sat with his thumb up his ass for a long time, trying to figure the best way to behave when reporting to a squadron commanded by an ex-sergeant.
"I've got a car outside. You can flip a coin to see who gets to sit in the rumble seat. Need any help with your gear?"
"I can manage, thanks," Ward said.
"No, Sir. Thank you, Sir," Schneider said.
He led them outside.
"Great car!" Jim Ward said. "I always wanted one of these. Yours?"
"Yeah. I bought it when I was with VMF-211, tore it apart, and rebuilt it."
Captain Galloway suspected that Lieutenant Schneider was not nearly as enthusiastic about a nine-year-old yellow Ford roadster as Lieutenant Ward was. And he saw that Schneider was almost visibly relieved when Ward settled himself in the rumble seat with their luggage. Riding in the rumble seat of a nine-year-old yellow Ford roadster was not the sort of thing that Lieutenant Schneider felt was appropriate for a Marine officer, especially one who had entered the service from Annapolis.
Galloway got behind the wheel.
"Following the sacred military custom of 'do as I say, not what I do,' " he said, "be advised that wearing flight suits off the flight line is a no-no. A couple of the guys have got themselves written up by the MPs and Shore Patrol."
"What happens then?" Ward asked.
"I reply by endorsement that the offenders have been hung, then drawn and quartered. It's a pain in the ass. We have only one kid for a clerk, and he's not all that good with a typewriter. So don't get caught."
"Got you," Jim Ward said. He leaned forward from the rumble seat and thrust an envelope, a thick one, firmly sealed with scotch tape, at Galloway.
"What's this?"
"A little note from Aunt Caroline," Jim Ward said.
"You hang onto it," Galloway said. "I'm greasy and so is the flight suit. I was about to take a shower when they called and said you were here."
"We could have waited," Schneider said.
"I figured to hell with it," Galloway said. "I'm going to fly again this afternoon anyway."
"We have planes?" Ward asked eagerly.
"Wildcats," Galloway said. "New Wildcats. And if you talk nicely to Sergeant Oblensky, he will have your name painted on it, and you can send a picture home to Mommy."
"Who is Sergeant Oblensky?" Ward asked.
"The maintenance sergeant. Best one in the Air Group. At the moment, he's also the first sergeant, the mess sergeant, the supply sergeant, and the motor sergeant."
"How is that, Sir?" Schneider asked.
"Because we don't have anybody else to be the first sergeant, the mess sergeant, the supply sergeant, or the motor sergeant. I'm working on it, so far with a monumental lack of success."
"I see," Schneider said.
"Where we're going now is to Ewa, where I will show you MAG-113 Headquarters,"-Marine Air Group 113; a MAG is the next superior headquarters to a squadron, the aviation equivalent, so to speak, of an infantry battalion-"then the BOQ, and then our squadron office. Then we'll go to the flight line, where I'll get out. You will then drive back to MAG-113. The Skipper-Lieutenant Colonel Clyde D. Dawkins-always wants a personal look at the new meat. When he's finished with you, go to the BOQ and get yourself set up there. And then go to the squadron office, where PFC Hastings will do all the necessary paperwork on you. I'll meet you there, and we can go to the club for our one daily beer and supper. OK?"
"Sounds fine to me," Ward said.
"The penalty for dinging your skipper's little yellow car is death by slow castration," Galloway said. "A word to the wise, so to speak." They chuckled.
"I suppose your flight physicals are up to date?"
"Yes, Sir," they chorused.
"OK. Make sure Hastings gets a copy. And your orders, too, of course. Then in the morning, we'll go flying. Local area checkout if nothing else. There are two IPs. Me and a Lieutenant name of Bill Dunn. He got a Betty and a Zero at Midway. Good pilot. Pay attention to what he says. I do."
"He's almost halfway to being an ace," Ward thought aloud.
"Before you fly away on dreams of glory," Galloway said, "he also took a 20mm round in his window at Midway that damned near made him a soprano, and he totalled the airplane when he set it down. Most of the pilots of VMF-211 who took off for Midway didn't come back. Bear that in mind, too."
There was a moment's silence and then Schneider said, "Sir, we're hardly presentable. To report to the Group Commander, I mean."
"Lieutenant," Galloway said, "we are blessed with a Group Commander who is wise enough to know how mussed people get flying here from the States. He wants a look at your balls, not the crease in your trousers."
Jim Ward laughed.
"Yes, Sir," Schneider said.
If first impressions are important, Galloway thought as he drove the Ford convertible down the taxi road behind the flight line, Big Steve just blew it so far as Schneider is concerned.
Technical Sergeant Oblensky was sitting on the ground in the shade of a Wildcat, his back against the left wheel, with a bottle of Coke resting on his belly. He was wearing service shoes and what had originally been khaki trousers, now somewhat raggedly cut off just above the knees. And nothing else. The belly on which the Coke bottle sat sagged over the trouser waistline. His massive chest was streaked with grease and what probably was hydraulic oil, and he needed a shave. His head and neck were sweat streaked.
As Galloway stopped the car and he and the others got out, Oblensky pushed himself to his feet and sauntered over. He glanced at the two young officers with Galloway and dismissed them as unimportant; then he looked at Galloway.
"Those fucking guns need a good armorer," he announced. "Peterson came back this morning with three of his guns jammed after three, four rounds."
There were four.50 caliber air-cooled Browning machine guns on F4F-4 aircraft.
"What's the problem? More important, what do we do about it?"
"If I knew what the problem was, I'd fix it," Oblensky said. "What I did was call a pal-used to be a China Marine, now he's a Gunny with the 2nd Raider Battalion, guy named Zimmerman. He said if I could get them over there, he'd have a look at them."