Top Secret (Clandestine Operations Series #1)

Top Secret (Clandestine Operations Series #1)

Top Secret (Clandestine Operations Series #1)

Top Secret (Clandestine Operations Series #1)

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Overview

From #1 New York Times bestselling authors W.E.B. Griffin and William E. Butterworth IV comes the first Clandestine Operations novel—featuring a new kind of threat and a different breed of warrior.

In the first weeks after World War II, James D. Cronley, Jr., is recruited for a new enterprise that will eventually be transformed into something called the CIA. For a new war has already begun against an enemy that is bigger, smarter, and more vicious: the Soviet Union.

The Soviets have hit the ground running, and Cronley’s job is to help frustrate them, harass them, and spy on them any way he can. But his first assignment might be his last. He’s got only seven days to extract a vital piece of information from a Soviet agent, and he’s already managed to rile up his superior officers. If he fails now, his intelligence career could be the shortest in history.

Because there are enemies everywhere—and, as Cronley is about to find out, some of them wear the same uniform he does...

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780698164628
Publisher: Penguin Publishing Group
Publication date: 08/05/2014
Series: Clandestine Operations Series , #1
Sold by: Penguin Group
Format: eBook
Pages: 528
Sales rank: 91,457
File size: 1 MB
Age Range: 18 Years

About the Author

About The Author
W. E. B. Griffin was the author of seven bestselling series: The Corps, Brotherhood of War, Badge of Honor, Men at War, Honor Bound, Presidential Agent, and Clandestine Operations. He passed away in February 2019.

William E. Butterworth IV has been an editor and writer for more than 25 years, and has worked closely with his father for over a decade on the editing and writing of the Griffin books. He is coauthor with him of more than a dozen New York Times bestselling novels. He is a member of the Sons of the American Legion, China Post #1 in Exile; the Office of Strategic Services (OSS) Society; and a life member of the National Rifle Association and the Texas Rifle Association. He lives in Florida.

Hometown:

Coppell, Texas

Date of Birth:

November 10, 1929

Place of Birth:

Newark, New Jersey

Read an Excerpt

I

[ ONE ]

National Airport

Alexandria, Virginia

0405 25 October 1945

The triple-tail Lockheed Constellation with howell petroleum lettered
on its fuselage came in low over the Potomac River, lowered its
gear, put down its huge flaps, and touched smoothly down at the
very end of the main north-south runway.

Her four engines roared as the pilot quickly moved the propellers
into reverse pitch and shoved her throttles forward. When the Connie
finally stopped, she was very uncomfortably close to the far end
of the runway and her tires were smoking.

The pilot radioed: “National, Howell One on the ground at six
past the hour. Request taxi instructions.”

“Howell One, turn and take Taxiway One on your right. Hold
there.”

“Howell One understands hold on Taxiway One.”

The Constellation was the finest transport aircraft in the world.
It was capable of flying forty passengers in its pressurized cabin
higher—at an altitude of 35,000 feet—and faster—it cruised at better
than 300 knots—and for a longer distance—4,300 miles—than
any other transport aircraft in the world. When National Airport
had opened in June 1941, it had been not much more than a pencil
sketch in the notebook of legendary aviator Howard Hughes, who
owned, among a good deal else, the Lockheed Aircraft Company.
Hughes, who had designed the Lockheed P-38 “Lightning” fighter
plane, had decided that if he took his design of the P-38’s wing, enlarged
it appropriately, put four engines on it, and then married it to
a huge, sleek fuselage with an unusual triple-tail design, he would
have one hell of an airplane.

“Build it,” Hughes ordered. “The Air Corps will buy it once they
see it. And if they don’t, I know at least one airline that will.”

Although the Congress, in its wisdom, had decreed that airlines
could not own aircraft manufacturing companies, and vice versa, it
was widely believed that Hughes secretly owned TWA, then known
as Transcontinental & Western Airlines, and later as Trans-World
Airlines.

No sooner had Howell One stopped on Taxiway One than a
small but impressive fleet of vehicles surrounded it. There were four
Ford station wagons and two large trucks. On all their doors was the
insignia of the Federal Bureau of Investigation. There was also a third
truck with a crane mounted in its bed, and a black 1942 Buick Road-
master. Neither was marked. The Buick had a large chrome object
housing a siren and a red light mounted on its left front fender. Finally,
there was a truck carrying the logotype of National Airport. It
had a stairway mounted in its bed.

A dozen or more men in business suits and hats and carrying
Thompson submachine guns erupted from the station wagons as the
truck with the stairs backed up against the Constellation’s rear door.

Two men in business suits got out of the Buick and quickly
climbed the stairs up to the fuselage.

They stood waiting at the top until the door was finally opened.

A handsome young officer—blond, six-foot-one, 212 pounds—
stood in the doorway. He was wearing an olive drab woolen “Ike”
jacket and trousers. The jacket’s insignia identified him as a second
lieutenant of Cavalry. The jacket was unbuttoned, and his necktie
pulled down.

The two men in suits flashed him looks of surprised disapproval
as they pushed past him and entered the cabin.

The cabin looked more like a living room pictured in Architectural
Digest than the interior of a passenger aircraft. Instead of rows
of seats, there were leather upholstered armchairs and couches scattered
along its length. There was a desk and two tables. A full bar
was at the front of the cabin. The floor was lushly carpeted.

Seated in armchairs were three people: a tall, sharp-featured, elegantly
tailored septuagenarian; a stocky, short-haired blond woman
in her late forties; and an attractive, tanned, and athletic-looking
young woman of about twenty.

They were, respectively, Cletus Marcus Howell, president and
chairman of the board of the Howell Petroleum Corporation; his
daughter-in-law, Martha Williamson Howell; and her daughter—the
old man’s granddaughter—Marjorie.

“I’m Assistant Deputy Director Kelly of the FBI,” the older of the
two men who had come into the cabin announced. He was in his
fifties, wore spectacles, and had a short haircut. “Welcome to Washington.”

No one responded.

“Where is the officer-in-charge?” Kelly asked.

The old man pointed to the young officer standing at the door.

“You just walked past him,” he said.

“I asked for the officer-in-charge, sir,” Kelly snapped.

“Sonny,” the old man said, “I hate to rain on your parade, but if
that FBI army you have with you was intended to dazzle me, it has
failed to do so.”

“Dad!” the older woman said warningly.

Her daughter smiled.

There came the sound of a siren, and then the squealing of brakes,
and finally the faint sound of car doors slamming closed.

A moment later, three men came into the cabin.

One wore the uniform of a rear admiral. Another, an Army brigadier
general, was in “pinks and greens”—a green tunic with pink
trousers. The third, a colonel, wore an Army olive drab uniform.

The colonel stopped just inside the door to both shake the hand
of the young officer, then affectionately pat his shoulder.

“You done real good, Jimmy,” Colonel Robert Mattingly said.

“Thank you, sir,” Second Lieutenant James D. Cronley Jr. replied.

“Admiral,” Kelly said.

“What are you doing here, Kelly?” Rear Admiral Sidney W.
Souers, U.S. Navy, demanded coldly.

“Self-evidently,” Kelly announced, “the FBI is here to guarantee
the security of the cargo aboard this aircraft until it can be placed in
the hands of the Manhattan Project.”

The door to the cockpit opened and a man wearing an airline-
type uniform stepped into the cabin. His tunic carried the four
golden stripes of a captain.

Admiral Souers turned to him.

“Any problems, Ford?”

The “captain,” who was in fact U.S. Navy Commander Richard
W. Ford, came to attention.

“None, Admiral,” he said.
Souers turned to Kelly.

“Thank you for your interest, Mr. Kelly. You and your people
may go.”

“Admiral, the FBI will stay here until the cargo is in the hands of
the Manhattan Project.”
Souers gestured toward the man in pink and greens.
“This is General Tomlinson of the Manhattan Project, Mr. Kelly.

You may report to Mr. Hoover, if you are here at his orders, that you
witnessed my turning over of the cargo to the Manhattan Project.”
Kelly, white-faced, didn’t reply.
“Are you going to leave, taking your people with you, Mr. Kelly?

Or am I going to have to go down to my car, get on the radio, wake
the President up, explain the situation to him and ask him to call
Director Hoover and tell him to tell you your presence here is not
required?”

Kelly turned on his heels, made an impatient gesture for the man
with him to follow, and left the cabin.
Souers shook his head as he looked away from the door.
“How did those sonsofbitches manage to beat us here?” he asked
rhetorically. He then quickly added, “Pardon the language, ladies.”
“My daughter-in-law and granddaughter have heard the word before,”
Cletus Marcus Howell said.
“Mattingly, do you think Hoover has someone in my office?”

Souers asked.
Mattingly shrugged. “Sir, I would not like to think so. But . . .”
“Admiral,” Commander Ford said, “the FBI must have had people
at the airport in Miami . . .”
“Where you refueled,” Souers instantly picked up his thought.

“With orders to keep an eye out for a civilian Constellation coming
from South America.”

“And they called Washington,” Mattingly added. “When they
learned you had filed a nonstop flight plan to National.”

“And instead of calling me,” Souers concluded, “the FBI—
probably J. Edgar himself—decided to meet the plane here.”

“Why?” General Tomlinson asked.

“J. Edgar is very good at turning any situation so that it shines a
flattering light on the FBI,” Souers said.

He turned and walked back to Second Lieutenant Cronley.

“I have a message for you, son, from President Truman,” he said.

“Yes, sir?”

“Quote Well done unquote.”

“Thank you, sir.”

“The President also said he wants to see you. That won’t happen
today, but when it does, I wouldn’t be surprised if he said you can
replace your golden bar with a silver one. But . . .”

Souers stopped as a colonel in an olive drab uniform with Corps
of Engineers insignia appeared in the doorway.

“Good morning, Broadhead,” General Tomlinson said. “Come in.”

“Good morning, sir.”

“Admiral Souers,” Tomlinson said, “this is Colonel Broadhead,
who will take charge of the cargo.”

Souers nodded, and then asked of Cronley, “Where is it, son?”

“In the cargo hold, sir.”

“How hot is it?” Colonel Broadhead asked.

Commander Ford answered for him.

“There are six packages, Colonel. Each weighing a little over
two hundred pounds. They’re roped so as to be manhandle-able.

Each came with two lead blankets, each weighing about a hundred
pounds. With the blankets off, my Geiger counter indicated significant,
but not life-threatening, radiation within a two-hour period.
With the lead blankets in place, the counter shows only insignificant
radiation.”

“You are?” Broadhead asked.

Ford looked to Souers for permission to answer the question.
Souers nodded, just perceptibly.

“Commander Richard Ford, sir.”

Broadhead then said, “Where did you first put the Geiger counter
to it, Commander? On the submarine?”

“Colonel,” Souers snapped, “who told you anything about a submarine?”

“Admiral,” General Tomlinson put in, “Colonel Broadhead has
worked for me in the Manhattan Project for three years. He has all
the necessary security clearances.”

“That’s very nice, General,” Souers said unpleasantly. “But my
question to the colonel with all the necessary security clearances was
‘Who said something—anything—to him about a submarine?’ ”

“Sir,” Broadhead said, “one of my duties at the Manhattan Project
was to keep an eye on the German efforts in that area. I knew they
had some uranium oxide—from the Belgian Congo—and I heard
about the missing German U-boats. When I heard that the OSS was
about to turn over to us a half ton of it that they’d acquired in Argentina,
it seemed to me the most logical place for the OSS to have gotten
it was from one of the missing U-boats.”

Souers went on: “And did you share this assumption of yours,
Colonel, with a bunch of other colonels—all with the necessary security
clearances—while you were sitting around having a beer?”

Broadhead, sensing where the line of questioning was headed, replied,
“Yes, sir. I’m afraid I did.”

“Not that it excuses you in any way, Colonel,” Souers said icily,
“but you’re just one of a great many stupid senior sonsof . . . officers
with all the necessary security clearances who think it’s perfectly all
right to share anything they know with anyone else who has such
clearances. Now do you take my point? Or do I have to order you not
to share with anyone anything you’ve seen or heard here today or any
assumptions you may make from what you have seen or heard?”

“Sir, I take your point.”

Souers let the exchange sink in for a very long twenty seconds,
and then ordered, “Ford, answer the colonel’s question.”

“When Cronley seized the cargo, sir,” Ford said, “he did not have
a Geiger counter device.”

“May I ask who Cronley is? And why he didn’t have a radiation
detection device?”

Admiral Souers turned to Cronley. “Son, I’m going to give Colonel
Broadhead the benefit of the doubt, meaning I am presuming
that he has a reason beyond idle curiosity in asking it. Therefore, you
may answer those questions.”

“Yes, sir,” Cronley said, then looked at Broadhead. “Sir, I’m Second
Lieutenant James D. Cronley Junior. The first Geiger counter I
ever saw was the one Commander Ford used on the . . . packages that
I took off . . . wherever they were and gave to him.”

“I predict a great military career for this fine young officer,” Admiral
Souers said. “I’m sure everyone noticed that he didn’t say ‘submarine’
or ‘U-boat’ or ‘uranium oxide’ even once.”

Souers let that sink in for another ten seconds, and then went on:
“Now my curiosity is aroused. Why did you want to know, Broadhead,
if the Geiger counter had been used on . . . wherever these
packages were when Cronley seized them?”

“Sir, I was hoping that someone looked for radiation that might
have leaked from the packages while they were on the sub—” He
stopped.

“Now that the cat’s out of the bag, Colonel,” Souers said, “you
can say ‘submarine.’ You can even say ‘U-boat’ and ‘uranium oxide.’ ”

“Yes, sir.”

Souers looked at Cletus Marcus Howell, who was grinning widely.

“Please don’t think this is funny, Mr. Howell,” he said.

“That was a smile of approval, Admiral. From one mean sonofabitch
to another.”

“Dad, for God’s sake!” Martha Howell said.

“I will take that as a compliment, Mr. Howell,” Souers said.

“It was intended as one,” the old man said.

Souers turned to Broadhead.

“You think the submarine may be hot, Broadhead?”

“I think it’s possible, sir. The uranium oxide was on the submarine
for a couple of months, maybe even longer.”

“Mattingly, get that word to Frade just as soon as we’re finished
here,” Souers ordered. “We don’t want to sterilize half the brighter
officers of the Armada Argentina, do we?”

“Yes, sir,” Colonel Mattingly said, smiling. “And no, sir, we certainly
wouldn’t want to do that.”

Second Lieutenant Cronley chuckled.

“I don’t understand that,” Cletus Marcus Howell said.

“Possibly, Dad,” his daughter-in-law said, “because you’re not supposed
to. It’s none of your business.”

“Actually, with apologies to the ladies, I was being crude in order
not to have to say ‘suffer radiation poisoning,’ ” Souers said. “And,
ma’am, the President ordered me to answer any questions Mr. Howell
might have.”

“I thought I told you, Martha,” the old man said, “that ole Harry
and I have the honor to be Thirty-third Degree Masons. We can
trust one another.”

“May I ask who ‘Frade’ is?” Broadhead said. “And if he’s qualified
to conduct an examination of this kind?”

“No, Colonel, you may not. You don’t have the Need to Know,”
Souers said. “Are you and General Tomlinson about ready to get the
cargo moving?”

“At your orders, Admiral,” Tomlinson said.

“Then may I suggest you get going?”

“Yes, sir.”

“Show them how to get into the cargo bay, Ford.”

“Aye, aye, sir.”

Cronley made a move suggesting he was going with them.

Souers held up his hand. “Unless the commander can’t find the
cargo without your help, son, you stay here.”

“Yes, sir,” Cronley said.

Souers waited until enough time had passed for Tomlinson,
Broadhead, and Ford to have gone down the stairway, then walked to
the door to make sure they had.

He turned to Cronley.

“The next problem we have, son, is what to do with you. My first
thought, when we first heard of what you had done, was regret that
you were coming with the uranium oxide.”

“For Christ’s sake, Admiral,” Cletus Marcus Howell exploded.
“You wouldn’t have that goddamned radioactive dirt if it wasn’t for

Jimmy! It seems to me a little gratitude is in order. Starting with a
leave so that he can go to Texas and see his father and mother.”

Souers ignored him.

“In the best of all possible worlds,” Souers went on, “you would
already be back in Germany. But the worst-case scenario has happened.
Hoover now knows your name and that you have had something
to do with the uranium ore. He will now be determined to
learn that precise relationship.”

“And Truman can’t tell him to mind his own business?” the old
man asked. “I think he will if I ask him. And I goddamned sure will.
I figure ole Harry owes me a little favor—hell, a large favor. You
know what it costs by the hour to fly this airplane? And I don’t mind
at all calling it in.”

“I hope I can talk you out of doing that, Mr. Howell. The problem
there is that if the President tells Hoover to mind his own business,
all that will do is whet Hoover’s curiosity. And we have to keep
in mind that the ore isn’t the only thing Cronley knows about.”

“You mean the Germans we sneaked into Argentina?”

Souers nodded. “That whole operation.”

“And you don’t trust Jimmy to keep his mouth shut, is that it?
That’s insulting!”

“The less he tells the FBI agents that Hoover certainly is going to
send to ‘interview’ him, the greater their—Hoover’s—curiosity is
going to be. I don’t want—can’t permit—the ax of Hoover learning
about the Gehlen operation to be hanging over the President.”

“I understand this, Mr. Howell,” Cronley said, then met Souers’s
eyes. “Sir, I’m perfectly willing to go back to Germany right away.”

“And then where do we get married?” Marjorie Howell demanded.
“In the ruins of Berlin? Maybe we could get married in that bunker
where Hitler married his mistress the day before he shot her. That
would be romantic as hell, wouldn’t it?”

“Chip off the old block, isn’t she, Admiral?” the old man said,
smiling with obvious pride. “She’s got my genes. I advise you not to
cross her.”

“Squirt,” Cronley said. “This is important stuff.”

“So far as I’m concerned, getting married is pretty important
stuff,” she said.

“Not that I think the admiral is at all interested,” Martha Howell
said, “but I thought you and Beth wanted a double wedding. And I
can’t set up something like that in less than three months.”

“You wanted the double wedding, Mother,” Marjorie said. “Let’s
get that straight. Beth would like to get married today. And so, goddamn
it, would I, now that I think about it.”

“I’m afraid your marriage plans are going to have to be put on
hold until we get this straightened out, Miss Howell,” Souers said.

“On hold for how long?” Marjorie demanded. “Or is that another
classified secret?”

“Yes, it is classified,” Souers said. “Highly classified. Lieutenant
Cronley is right, Miss Howell. This is very important stuff.”

“So you’re going to send him right back to Germany?” Marjorie
said. “ ‘Thank you for all you’ve done, Lieutenant. Don’t let the knob
on the airplane door hit you in the ass as you get on board.’ ”

“That’s quite enough, Marjorie!” her mother announced.

“Cool it, Squirt,” Cronley said. “I’m a soldier. I obey my orders.”

“I would like to send him back to Germany immediately, Miss
Howell,” Souers said. “But unfortunately, that’s not possible. President
Truman wants to see him before he goes back, and that’s it.”

“You’re going to explain that, right?” Cletus Marcus Howell said.

“What Colonel Mattingly suggested, and what we’re going to do,
is put Lieutenant Cronley on ice, so to speak, until the President’s
schedule is such that he can see him.”

“What does ‘on ice, so to speak’ mean, Admiral?” Marjorie said.

“Well, since we can’t put him in a hotel, or at Fort Myer, because

J. Edgar’s minions would quickly find him, what we’re going to do
is put him in the Transient Officers’ Quarters at Camp Holabird.
That’s in Baltimore. Mattingly tells me junior CIC officers passing
through the Washington area routinely stay there—it’s a dollar and a
half a night—so he won’t attract any attention. Mattingly will arrange
for them to misplace his registry card, so if the FBI calls for
him they can say they have no record of him being there.”
“And how long will he be there?” the old man asked.

“Just until he sees the President. And on that subject, Mr. Howell,
the President would like to see you there at the same time. And he
would be furious with me if he later learned that your granddaughter
and Mrs. Howell were here and I hadn’t brought you along to the
White House for his meeting with Lieutenant Cronley.”

“And after he meets with the President, he gets on the plane to
Germany?” Marjorie said.

Souers nodded.

“If Jimmy goes to Germany, I’m going to Germany,” Marjorie
then announced.

“We’ll talk about that, dear,” Martha Howell said.

“If Jimmy goes to Germany, I’m going to Germany. Period. Subject closed.”


[ TWO ]

The Officers’ Club

U.S. Army Counterintelligence Center & School
Camp Holabird

1019 Dundalk Avenue, Baltimore 19, Maryland

1730 25 October 1945

The artwork behind the bar at which Second Lieutenant Cronley was
sipping at his second scotch was more or less an oil painting. It portrayed
three soldiers wearing World War I–era steel helmets trying very
hard not to be thrown out of a Jeep bouncing three feet off the ground.

Rather than an original work, it was an enlargement of a photograph
taken at Camp Holabird in 1939. The U.S. Army Quartermaster
Corps, which had then reigned over Camp Holabird, was testing
the new Willys-designed vehicle. Some GI artist had colored the photograph
with oil paints.

Cronley had heard the rumor that it was at Camp Holabird
that the vehicle—officially known as “Truck, ¼ Ton, 4×4, General
Purpose”—first had been dubbed “Jeep,” from the G and P in General
Purpose.

He wasn’t sure if this was true or just lore. Or bullshit, like the
rumors circulating among the student officers and enlisted men
about My Brother’s Place, the bar directly across Dundalk Avenue
from the main gate. That lore, or bullshit, held that an unnamed
“foreign power” had a camera with a long-range lens installed in an
upstairs window with which they were taking photographs of everyone
coming out the gate.

That, the lore said, would of course pose enormous problems for
the students when they graduated and were sent “into the field.”

His thoughts were interrupted when a voice beside him said,
“Cronley, isn’t it?”

He turned and saw the speaker was a major.

“Yes, sir.”

The major offered his hand. “Remember me, Cronley? Major
Derwin? ‘Techniques of Surveillance’?”

“Yes, sir, of course. Good to see you again, sir.”

“So they sent you back, did they, to finish the course?”

“Just passing through, sir.”

“From where to where, if I can ask?”

“Munich to Munich, sir. With a brief stop here. I was the escort
officer for some classified documents.”

That bullshit came to me naturally. I didn’t even have to wonder
what cover story I should tell this guy.

“Munich? I thought you’d been sent to the Twenty-second in
Marburg.”

“Yes, sir. I was. Then I was transferred to the Twenty-seventh.”

Counterintelligence Corps units were numbered. When written,
for reasons Cronley could not explain—except as a manifestation of
the Eleventh Commandment that there were three ways to do
anything, the Right Way, the Wrong Way, and the Army Way—
Roman numerals were used. For example, the XXVIIth CIC Detachment.


“I’m not familiar with the Twenty-seventh. Who’s the senior
agent?”

Is that classified? No. It’s not.

The XXIIIrd CIC Detachment and what it does is classified—oh,
boy, is it classified!—but not the XXVIIth. The XXVIIth is the cover for
the XXIIIrd.

“Major Harold Wallace, sir.”

“Wallace? Harold Wallace?”

“Yes, sir.”

“I don’t think I know him.”

“I’m not sure if this is so, sir, but I’ve heard that Major Wallace
was in Japan, and sent to Germany because we’re so under strength.”

Actually, before President Truman put the OSS out of business, Wallace
had been deputy commander of OSS Forward. I can’t tell this guy
that; he doesn’t have the Need to Know. And if I did, he probably
wouldn’t believe me.

And, clever fellow that I am, I learned early this morning from
Admiral Souers—who really knows how to eat someone a new anal
orifice—that sharing classified information one has with someone who
also has a security clearance is something that clever fellows such as myself
just should not do.

“That would explain it,” Major Derwin said. “The personnel
problem is enormous. They scraped the bottom of the Far East Command
CIC barrel as they scraped ours here.”

“Yes, sir.”

As a matter of fact, Major, the morning report of the XXIIIrd CIC
Detachment shows a total strength of two officers—Major Wallace and
me—and two EM—First Sergeant Chauncey L. Dunwiddie and Sergeant
Friedrich Hessinger. And we really see very little of Major Wallace
of the XXVIIth.

“No offense, Cronley,” Major Derwin said.

“Sir?”

“It certainly wasn’t your fault that scraping the barrel here saw
you sent into the field before you were properly trained. Did you find
yourself in over your head?”

“Sir, that’s something of an understatement. No offense taken.”

On the other hand, this morning Colonel Mattingly patted my shoulder
and said, “You done good, Jimmy.”

Their conversation was interrupted by the bartender, a sergeant
who was earning a little extra money by tending bar. He inquired, “Is
there a Lieutenant Crumley in here?”

Speaking of the devil, that’s Colonel Mattingly, calling to tell me the
President can’t find time for me and that he’s sending a car to take me to
the airport for my flight back to Germany.

And I probably won’t even get to say goodbye to the Squirt.

Shit!

“There’s a Lieutenant Cronley,” Jimmy called.

The bartender came to him and handed him a telephone on a
long cord.

Jimmy said into it: “Lieutenant Cronley, sir.”

“Sergeant Killian at the gate, Lieutenant,” the caller replied.
“There’s a civilian lady here wanting to see you. A Miss Howell.
Should I pass her through?”

Cronley’s heart jumped.

“After first giving her directions to the officers’ club, absolutely!”

“Yes, sir.”

Cronley handed the phone back to the bartender.

“My date has arrived, sir,” Cronley said to Major Derwin.

We never had a date, come to think of it.

One moment, Squirt was Clete’s annoying little sister, and the next
we were . . . involved.

“Ah, to be young!” Major Derwin said. “You just got here, and
already you’re playing the field.”

Cronley smiled but didn’t reply.

Derwin had a helpful thought and expressed it.

“Perhaps you should go outside and wait for her. The club’s sign is
poorly lit.”

“She’s a very resourceful young woman, sir. She’ll find me.”

Five minutes later, the Squirt did.

She stopped at the door to the bar just long enough for Jimmy to
see her, which caused his heart to thump, and then walked to him.

“Hi,” she said.

“Hi, yourself.” Jimmy then turned to Derwin. “Major Derwin,
may I introduce Miss Marjorie Howell?”

Please, Major, say “Nice to meet you” and then leave us alone.

“A great pleasure, Miss Howell. When the lieutenant was a student
here, I was his instructor in the techniques of surveillance. Obviously,
I taught him well. Look what he found.”

Miss Howell gave him an icy look.

Please, Squirt, don’t say what you’re thinking!

“Oh, really?” she asked. Then, “Jimmy, why don’t you pay your
tab? I’m pressed for time.”

“Well, there’s a small problem there,” Cronley said. “All I have is
Funny Money—Army of Occupation Scrip—and they won’t take
that here. I don’t suppose you’d loan me a few dollars?”

She looked at him, saw on his face that he was telling the truth,
and reached into her purse. She came out with a thick wad of currency,
folded in half, that seemed to be made up entirely of new onehundred-
dollar bills.

She unfolded the wad and extended it to him. He took three of
the hundreds.
“Thank you,” he said, and then curiosity got the better of him.

“What are you doing with all that money?”
“I thought I might need it in Germany, so I cashed a check.”
“You’re going to Germany, Miss Howell?” Major Derwin asked.
“Yes, I am,” she said. “Pay the bill, please, Jimmy.”
“Oh, you’re from an Army family?”
“Not yet,” Marjorie said. “Thank you for entertaining Jimmy
until I could get here, Major.”

[THREE]

Marjorie took Jimmy’s hand as they left the officers’ club and led

him to a bright yellow 1941 Buick convertible.
“I’ll drive,” she said. “You’ve been drinking.”
He got in beside her.
“Where the hell did you get the car?”
“On a lot on Ninth Street. One look and I had to have it.”
“You bought it?” he asked incredulously.
“And since it was parked right in front of the lot, I thought I
could buy it quicker than anything else they had. I didn’t know how
long it was going to take me to get here.”
“What are you going to do with it when you go to Midland?”
“I’m not going to Midland. Weren’t you listening? I’m going to Germany.”
“We have to talk about that,” he said.

“I don’t like the way you said that.”

She turned to face him. Their eyes met.

“Jimmy, you sound like my mother trying to reason with me . . .”

Their conversation was interrupted when the proximity of their
faces caused a mutual involuntary act on both their parts.

A minute or so later, Jimmy said, “Jesus H. Christ!” and Marjorie
said, a little breathlessly, “Don’t let this go to your head, but as kissers
go, you’re not too bad.”

A moment after that, she said, “No! God, Jimmy, not in the car!”

“Sorry.”

“Let’s go to a motel,” she said. “God, I can’t believe I said that!”

He put his hands on her arms and moved her back behind the
steering wheel.

“About you coming to Germany,” he then said. “Do you remember
what the major said, that he asked, ‘Oh, you’re from an Army
family?’ ”

“What’s that got to do with anything?”

“The only way you’re going to get into Germany, Squirt, is as a
member of an Army family. The Army calls them ‘dependents.’ ”

“I’ll get into Germany. Trust me.”

“If you did, we couldn’t get married. There’s a rule about that,
too. You can’t get married in Germany without permission, and they
won’t give you permission to marry unless you have less than ninety
days to serve in the theatre.”

“In the theatre?”

“That’s what they call it, the ‘European Theatre of Operations.’
The rules are designed to keep people from marrying Germans.”

“How do you know so much about this subject?” Marjorie asked
suspiciously.

“Professor Hessinger delivered a lecture on the subject to Tiny
and me one night when we were sitting around with nothing else
to do.”

“Who the hell are they?”

“They are my staff,” he said, chuckling. “If you’re going to be an
Army wife, Squirt, you’ll have to learn that all officers, including
second lieutenants, have staffs. Hessinger and Tiny are mine.”

“If you’re trying to string me along, Jimmy, you’re never going to
get to do what you tried to do a moment ago.”

“Hessinger is a sergeant. Tiny Dunwiddie is a first sergeant. Interesting
guys.”

“I will play along with this for the next thirty seconds.”

“Hessinger is a German Jew who got out of Germany just in time,
went to Harvard, and then got drafted. They put him in the CIC
because he speaks German. He’s still got an accent you can cut with
a knife.”

“Fifteen seconds.”

“Tiny is an enormous black guy. Two-thirty, six-three. He went to
Norwich University in Vermont.”

“Where? Ten seconds.”

“Norwich is a private military college in Vermont, the oldest one,”
Cronley said, now speaking so rapidly it was almost a verbal blur.

Marjorie giggled, which he found surprisingly erotic.

“Slow down,” she said. “You’ve got another thirty seconds.”

“. . . from which, rather than waiting to graduate and get a commission,
he dropped out and enlisted so he could get into the war
before they called it off. He’s from an Army family. His ancestors
were the Buffalo Soldiers who fought the Indians. Two of his great-
grandfathers were in the Tenth Cavalry, which, Tiny has told me at least
twenty times, beat Teddy Roosevelt up San Juan Hill in Cuba
during the Spanish American War.”

“And did he manage to get in the war before they called it off?”
Marjorie asked, and then added: “Damn you. You’ve got me. You’re
as good at that as my mother. But there better be a point to this history
lesson.”

“Yeah, he got in the war. Silver Star, Bronze Star, and two Purple
Hearts serving with a tank destroyer battalion in the Second Armored
Division. Plus first sergeant’s stripes when all the sergeants
senior to him got killed or wounded. He’s one hell of a soldier.”

“But they still didn’t give him a commission? Why, because he
didn’t finish college? Or because he’s Negro?”

“No. Because he was needed to run the company of black troops
Colonel Mattingly has guarding the Gehlen compound. I said he’s a
hell of a soldier. He takes that duty, honor, country business very seriously.
He knows guarding General Gehlen and his people is more
important than being one more second lieutenant in a tank platoon
somewhere.”

“I get the feeling you really like this guy.”

“Yeah, I do.”

“So what about the Jewish sergeant with an accent you can cut
with a knife?”

“Freddy’s hobby is reading. You never see him without a book of
some kind in his hand. Including Army Regulations. And he remembers
every last detail of anything he’s ever read. That’s why we call
him ‘the professor.’ ”

“His hobby is reading? You’re suggesting he’s a little funny?” Marjorie
waved her hand to suggest there might be a question of his sexual
orientation.

Jimmy laughed.

“That’s not the professor’s problem. I should have said, ‘You never
see him without a tall, good-looking German blond—or two—on
his arm, and a book in the other hand.’”

“And what did this Jewish Casanova with an accent remember
Army Regulations saying about us getting married in Germany?”

Jimmy told her again: The bottom lines were (a) she could not get
into Occupied Germany unless she was a dependent, and (b) even if
she did somehow get into Occupied Germany, they could not get
permission to marry there.

When he had finished, she said without much conviction, “There
has to be a way.”

“I’ve been thinking about that. Are you open to a wild idea?”

“Try me.”

“When I was here before, I learned that Elkton, Maryland, up
near the Pennsylvania border, is where people go when they’re eloping.
Justices of the peace there will issue a marriage license, then
marry you, and have you on your way in about an hour.”

“Huh,” Marjorie said.

“What I was thinking was that, since they’re going to send me—”

“Where did you say Elkton, Maryland, is?”

“On U.S. 1 up near the Pennsylvania border.”

“I came from Washington on U.S. 1,” Marjorie said. “I know how
to find it.”

She reached to the dashboard, turned the ignition key, and then
pressed the starter button.

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