Выбрать главу

Donald nodded.

"Dunwood?" McCoy asked.

"I don't have any problems with any of this," Dunwood said.

"Okay. That's it," McCoy said, and then added: "I don't think Bill Dunston and I should go back to Seoul together. I think we should go separately—say, an hour apart, in two jeeps. Dunwood, can you let each of us have, say, six Marines? With a couple of BARs?"

"No problem," Dunwood said.

"You go first, McCoy," Dunston said. "I'll want to explain all this to the Ko­reans, and I'd like to see what I can do about identifying my people the NKs found here."

"The sooner I get out of here, the better," McCoy said, scrambling to his feet. "Ernie, I don't care if you have to keep those fires burning all week."

"That thought ran through my mind, Major, sir," Zimmerman said.

[SIX]

Headquarters,

Capital ROK Division Near

Samchoh, South Korea

O83O 4 October 195O

McCoy's two-jeep convoy was stopped by two diminutive South Korean sol­diers who stepped out of the ditches alongside National Route 5, about twenty miles south of Socho-Ri, with their rifles at their shoulders and aimed at McCoy, who was driving the lead jeep.

They wore the shoulder patches of the Capital ROK Division safety-pinned to the shoulders of their too-large U.S. Army fatigues, and looked, on one hand, slightly ludicrous in their outsized uniforms, not looking as if they were large enough to effectively wield the M-l Garands with which they were armed. But on the other hand, they looked tough and mean.

They were visibly surprised to see two jeeps carrying Americans coming to­ward them from what, so far as they knew, was territory still controlled by the North Koreans.

And even more surprised when McCoy snapped at them, in Korean, "Don't soldiers of the Capital ROK Division salute American officers?"

The rifles were lowered, and almost ludicrous salutes rendered, which McCoy returned with a salute worthy of the parade ground at Camp Lejeune.

The ROK soldiers told him that Capital ROK Division headquarters strad­dled the highway a mile farther south.

"Get back in your positions," McCoy ordered, and put the jeep in gear.

There were two L-4s parked, one on each side of National Route 5. The ROKs were apparently using the narrow road for an airstrip.

The L-4, essentially a Piper Cub, was the two-passenger, high-wing, low-and-slow observation and liaison aircraft that preceded the Cessna L-19.

McCoy thought the ROKs were like the Marines, being issued only equip­ment the Army thought it no longer needed.

There was a small tent city on both sides of the road, too, U.S. Army squad tents that had apparently been erected in the belief they would soon have to be struck and moved someplace else.

In front of two tents assembled end-to-end he spotted three flags: the Ko­rean national colors; the blue flag of the United Nations; and a red flag with two stars on it. Two soldiers were standing with the butts of their Garands rest­ing between their feet were guarding the tents, several jeeps parked in front of them, one highly polished with half-doors and a rack of radios in the back.

He drove up to it, the second jeep following.

The guards raised their rifles.

"Stand at ease," McCoy barked in Korean. The guards assumed a position not unlike Parade Rest, and saluted by crossing their right hands to the muz­zles of the Garands.

McCoy got out of the jeep and walked into the tent.

It was full of officers and soldiers, radios, telephone switchboards, and desks.

A Korean colonel wearing impeccably fitting and perfectly starched and pressed fatigues, polished boots, with a .45 in a tanker's shoulder holster turned from the map board when McCoy pushed the flap aside and light en­tered the tent.

McCoy saluted.

"Good morning, Colonel," he said in Korean. "May I have a moment of your time?"

Everybody in the tent was now looking at him.

The colonel returned McCoy's salute crisply.

"Good morning," he said in faultless English. "I'm Colonel Pak. I'm sur­prised, Major, to see a Marine officer this far east."

"May I have a moment of the colonel's time?" McCoy said, continuing in Korean.

"And, if you don't mind my saying so, one who speaks Korean so well," the colonel replied in English. "How may I be of service to the Marines?"

McCoy decided the colonel was an officer who had most likely learned his English while an officer in the Japanese Army, and had then been one of the rare ex-Japanese officers selected to start up the South Korean Army, and as a result of that had been sent to one or more U.S. Army schools in the States. His English was American accented.

"May I come to the map board, sir?"

Colonel Pak gestured that he could.

McCoy went to the map, found Socho-Ri, and pointed to it.

"Sir, I have established a small camp here," he said.

"That far north?" Pak asked rhetorically. "How long have you been there?"

"The first element arrived two days ago, sir."

"Why do I suspect you are not the lead elements of the First Marine Division?"

"We are not, sir," McCoy said.

Colonel Pak grunted.

"What can I do for you, Major?"

"Two things, sir. I hoped you could get word to your people before they move in that direction that my people are there."

Pak nodded, then picked up a grease pencil and made a check mark on the acetate covering the map.

"And the second?"

"Colonel, it is important that I get to Seoul as quickly as possible," Mc­Coy said.

"And you would like a ride in one of our L-4s?"

"If they are not required for a more important mission, yes, sir."

"At the moment, the CG is at I ROK Corps seeking permission to move north," the general said. "Until we get that permission, they are not very busy. Observation has not revealed any enemy forces within thirty miles of here. Have you seen any indications of the enemy?"

"No, sir. I suspect—but do not know for sure—that they are no closer than twenty miles north of Socho-Ri." Colonel Pak grunted.

"As I said, our aircraft are not being utilized at the moment, Major. But the problem I have is that I cannot afford to lose either of them—either to enemy action or, bluntly, to one of my fellow senior ROK officers who might com­mandeer it at the Race Track in Seoul. Having one's own aircraft, I'm afraid, has become the ROK equivalent of the German field marshal's baton. My gen­eral is known for his temper; I don't want to have to tell him, when he flies back in here in the third of our aircraft, that I loaned one of the others to a Marine who didn't give it back."

McCoy smiled.

"Colonel, if you would have me dropped at the Race Track, your pilot would not even have to shut the engine down, and anyone trying to comman­deer your airplane would have to go through me."

Colonel Pak grunted, then replied: "At Quantico, Major, one of the lessons I learned—in addition to how to drink martinis—was that a Marine officer's word is his bond.'

"We try to keep it that way, sir," McCoy said, and then curiosity got the better of him. "May I ask what you were doing at Quantico, sir?"

"The idea was that South Korea was to have Marines," the general said. "But that, obviously, is going to have to be put off for the moment." He smiled at McCoy. "May I offer you a cup of tea before you take off, Major?"

"That's kind, but unnecessary, sir."

"It would be my pleasure, I insist," Colonel Pak said. "And, if you don't mind, I'd like to have your—unofficial, of course—thoughts on the possibility that the Chinese will enter this conflict."

"Frankly, sir, I was wondering if I could ask you the same thing," Mc­Coy said.