«I wasn't rooting for Carolyn,» Ernie replied.
Yes, I was. I like Carolyn, and I don't know Ed Banning's Russian refugee wife
.
«Is there somebody you left over there I don't know about?» Ernie was horrified to hear herself blurt.
«No,» he said, suddenly very angry, and then went on. «Actually, I have two Chinese wives, one in Shanghai and one in Peking. And seven kids, or is it eight? It's hard for me to keep track.»
The MP returned from his guard shack with the Official Visitor sign for the car and a mimeographed map of the airfield with the base operations building circled, just as the lady with the ONI agent called him, «You bastard!»
When they saw the LaSalle convertible pull into a visitor's parking slot, Colonel H. A. Albright, USA, and Lieutenant Colonel Edward Banning, USMC, were inside the base operations building, looking out the glass door. Banning was wearing a web belt with a holster .45 hanging from it.
«They were good cars,» Colonel Albright said. «I always wondered why they stopped making them.»
«That's McCoy's,» Banning said, and wondered aloud, «How did he get it onto the field?»
«There's someone with him,» Albright said, and added accusingly, «a woman.»
«Well, you know what they say about Marines, Colonel,» Banning said. «A girl in every port.»
After McCoy took his Val-Pak from the backseat of the car, he and Ernie walked up to the building.
«Well, McCoy's here,» Banning said, and then asked, in thick innocence, «I wonder whatever can have happened to the personnel records crates?»
«They'll be here,» Albright announced firmly. He checked his watch. «It's not 0900 yet.»
«Good morning, Captain McCoy,» Banning said. «And, Ernie, what a pleasant surprise, and I mean surprise, it is to see you here.»
«Hello, Ed,» Ernie said.
She's not amused. And not only because Ken is going away again. She's annoyed with me. In her shoes, I would be, too. She and Carolyn are friends.
«Colonel Albright, may I present Miss Ernestine Sage?» Banning said. «She and Captain McCoy are… what should I say?»
«Try 'lovers,' « Ernie said. «How do you do, Colonel?»
«How do you do, Miss Sage? Colonel Banning and I were just wondering how you managed to get on the base.»
«I gave Captain McCoy the choice: he could either get me in to watch his plane take off, or I would throw a fit at the gate,» she said.
Albright laughed politely. I
like this young woman. Very starchy. And a beautiful girl. And obviously in love with McCoy
.
«How, Ken?» Banning asked.
McCoy shrugged and tapped his jacket pocket. Banning understood he had used his ONI credentials.
«And have you given any thought to how she's going to get off the base?» Banning asked.
«Miss Sage can leave with me,» Albright heard himself saying. «No problem.»
«Thank you, sir,» McCoy said.
Banning touched Albright's arm and nodded toward the glass doors.
A small convoy, consisting of a Chevrolet sedan, a Ford panel truck, and a second Chevrolet sedan, was approaching the base operations building. The three vehicles stopped and a man in civilian clothing stepped out of the first car, trying with little success to conceal a Thompson submachine gun by holding it vertically against his body.
Albright turned to Ernie.
«I'll meet you here, Miss Sage, in just a few minutes,» he said, and walked out of the building.
Banning went to a door off the base operations foyer, opened it, and motioned to the people inside to come out. Then he walked back to where Ken and Ernie were standing.
«Five minutes, Ken,» he said. «It's the only C-46 in the second line of airplanes. You can't miss it.»
«Aye, aye, sir,» McCoy said. «Thank you.»
«Ernie, when you see Carolyn, tell her…«
«What, Ed?»
«That I'm sorry, I guess,» he said. «Tell her I never wanted to hurt her.»
«Yeah,» Ernie said. «I know.»
Banning walked out of the building.
Three men came out of the small room into the foyer. Two of them were Marines—a baby-faced lieutenant and an older man. Ernie had never seen either of them before. They were wearing belts with pistols hanging from them, and had Thompson submachine guns cradled in their arms.
«Good morning, sir,» they greeted McCoy.
The third man, who was bearded like Ken and wearing civilian clothing, looked vaguely familiar. He had two identical canvas weekend bags, one of which he handed to McCoy.
«You remember Gunny Zimmerman, Ernie?» McCoy asked.
«Oh, yes,» she lied, and smiled, and then did remember. She had met him one time in New York, in Pennsylvania Station.
«Ma'am,» Zimmerman said, and picked up McCoy's Val-Pak before following the others out of the building.
Ernie saw that the back of the panel truck had been opened. Everyone put their luggage in the back, then got into the Chevrolet sedans. The little convoy drove away.
Ernie looked into McCoy's eyes.
«Damn,» she said.
«Damn,» he agreed.
«They don't give you a gun?» she asked. It was all she could think of that was safe to say.
He raised the canvas weekend bag. «There's a machine pistol in here,» he said.
«I should have guessed,» Ernie said, and then she said what she was thinking. «Goddamn you, Ken, when you come back, you're going to marry me and we're going to make babies.»
«If I come back…«
«Don't use that goddamned word, 'if'!»
«Let me finish.»
«Finish.»
«If I come back, we'll get married,» McCoy said.
She threw herself into his arms and stayed there, even though, the way he was holding her and his bag, the barrel of his machine pistol was painfully jabbing into her upper leg.
And then he broke away.
«Jesus Christ, I love you!» he announced, his voice breaking toward the end, and then he walked out of the building.
In a moment, she followed him, and watched as he made his way to a very large twin-engine transport plane with air transport command painted along its fuselage. One of its engines was already running. Colonel Albright stood at the ladder leading down from the door in the fuselage. He shook McCoy's hand, and then McCoy climbed the ladder. As soon as he was inside, the door closed. The plane immediately began to move, taxiing with just one engine.
Albright walked to her, and they stood in front of the base operations building while the C-46 taxied to the end of the runway, then roared down it, lifting off and heading for the skyscrapers of Manhattan, just visible on the horizon.
«I understand your Captain McCoy is a very capable officer, Miss Sage,» Albright said.
«There has been a change in our status, Colonel,» Ernie said. «Three minutes ago, it went from 'lovers' to 'affianced.' «
«Then let me offer my best wishes.»
«Thank you,» Ernie said.
note 53
The Greenbrier Hotel
White Sulphur Springs, West Virginia
1645 18 March 1943