W.E.B. Griffin - Retreat, Hell!

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It is the fall of 1950. The Marines have made a pivotal breakthrough at Inchon, but a roller coaster awaits them. While Douglas MacArthur chomps at the bit, intent on surging across the 38th parallel, Brigadier General Fleming Pickering works desperately to mediate the escalating battle between MacArthur and President Harry Truman. And somewhere out there, his own daredevil pilot son, Pick, is lost behind enemy lines--and may be lost forever. Apple-style-span From Publishers Weekly
Megaseller Griffin (Honor Bound; Brotherhood of War; Men at War) musters another solid entry in his series chronicling the history of the U.S. Marines, now engaged in the Korean War. Gen. Douglas MacArthur, nicknamed El Supremo by his subordinates, is taken by surprise when the North Korean Army surges south across the 38th parallel. After early losses, he rallies his troops and stems the tide, but not for long. Intertwining stories of literally an army of characters reveal how MacArthur and his sycophantic staff overlook the entire Red Chinese Army, which is massed behind the Yalu River and about to enter the war. Brig. Gen. Fleming Pickering attempts to mediate the ongoing battles between feisty, give-'em-hell Harry Truman and the haughty MacArthur, while worrying about his pilot son, Malcolm "Pick" Pickering, who has been shot down behind enemy lines. The introduction of the Sikorsky H-19A helicopter into the war by Maj. Kenneth "Killer" McCoy and sidekick Master Gunner Ernie Zimmerman details the invention of tactics that will become commonplace in Vietnam. Readers looking for guts and glory military action will be disappointed, as barely a shot is fired in anger, but fans of Griffin's work understand that the pleasures are in the construction of a complex, big-picture history of war down to its smallest details: "There were two men in the rear seat, both of them wearing fur-collared zippered leather jackets officially known as Jacket, Flyers, Intermediate Type G-1." Veterans of the series will enjoy finding old comrades caught up in fresh adventures, while new-guy readers can easily enter here and pick up the ongoing story.

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"Keller wants you to do it again, Killer," Hart said as he came up. "All he saw was the crash landing." And then he saw McCoy's face. "Jesus Christ! Did you break something?"

"No," McCoy said. "I don't think I did my fucking leg any good, but I don't think anything's broken." He looked up at Pickering. "If you'll take the Thomp­son, sir, these two can get me on my feet."

Pickering took the submachine gun.

Hart went behind McCoy, wrapped his arms around his middle, and with no apparent effort hoisted him erect.

"You're sure nothing's broken?" he asked.

"I would know," McCoy said. But he didn't protest when Hart grasped his right upper arm firmly, and motioned for Keller to do the same thing with the left one.

There was the sound of sirens, and moments later, four Military Police jeeps came onto the tarmac from behind the hangar.

"Well," McCoy said. "I'm glad nothing was really wrong. They took their sweet time getting here."

"What's going on?" Pickering asked.

"I had the pilot tell the tower to send MP jeeps here," McCoy explained.

Four MPs, one of them a lieutenant, all in sharply creased olive-drab Class A uniforms, with white leather accoutrements and plastic covers on their brimmed caps against the rain, rushed up.

"What's going on here?" the lieutenant demanded, and belatedly recogniz­ing the star on Pickering's collar points and epaulets, added as he saluted, "Sir? Good evening, sir."

"I'm going to need a forty-passenger bus," McCoy said. "And an MP escort to the Dai Ichi Building," McCoy said.

"What for, Ken?" Pickering asked softly.

"To transport thirty-two Red Chinese prisoners of war, sir. They were cap­tured this morning. I understand General Willoughby doesn't think the Chi­nese are in the war. If this doesn't convince him, I don't know what will."

The lieutenant looked at General Pickering. "Sir, I don't know—"

"It looks simple enough to me, Lieutenant," Pickering said. "You heard the major. Get a bus, and get it right now."

By the time the bus arrived, so had a half-dozen more Military Police jeeps, plus a jeep with the logotype of Stars and Stripes painted beneath the windshield, and carrying three men whose uniforms bore WAR CORRESPONDENT insignia. Everybody had a camera.

"What's going on here?" several of them demanded at once.

"We're about to unload some Red Chinese prisoners of war," Pickering said, "who will be transported to the Dai Ichi Building for interrogation by Gen­eral Willoughby."

That produced a flood of questions—including "Who are you?"—all of which Pickering ignored.

"Lieutenant," Pickering said to the MP lieutenant. "Permit the press to take pictures as the prisoners are taken off the airplane. The Geneva Conven­tion prohibits the interview of prisoners without their permission, and I'm sure that permission will not be forthcoming. So keep them away from the prison­ers. And keep the press here when the bus leaves."

"Sir, I don't know who you are," the lieutenant said.

"That's not important," Pickering said. "I'm a general officer, and you're a lieutenant. All right?"

"Yes, sir."

"I will need a ride in one of your jeeps," Pickering said.

"Yes, sir."

"General," McCoy said. "I want to go to the Dai Ichi Building."

"Hart and Keller are going to take you to the hospital, Major, and I don't want any argument. I'll meet you there."

"I really would like to see the prisoners go into the Dai Ichi Building, sir."

"Even if I told you Ernie's back in the hospital?" Pickering asked.

McCoy's face showed his stunned reaction, but he didn't say anything.

Pickering took pity on him.

"She's all right, Ken. It's probably another false alarm."

"Then there's no real reason I couldn't go to the Dai Ichi Building, is there, sir?"

Pickering looked at him for a long moment.

"I guess you've earned that, McCoy," Pickering said. "Lieutenant, I won't need that ride. Why don't you start off-loading the prisoners?"

"Yes, sir," the lieutenant said.

"George, bring the car around for Major McCoy," Pickering ordered, then climbed the stairs up to the Bataan after the lieutenant.

[FIVE]

Room 39A, Neuro-Psychiatric Ward

U.S. Naval Hospital

San Diego, California

143O 2 November 195O

In Tokyo, and in Korea, it was the middle of the night, and it was raining, a cold, steady drizzle. Halfway around the world, in San Diego, California, it was midafternoon on what Brigadier General Clyde W Dawkins some­what grumpily thought of as "another goddamn perfect Southern Califor­nia day."

In the back of his mind, there had been a faint, perhaps somewhat dis­loyal, hope that there would suddenly develop a thunderstorm of such pro­portions that a full-scale retreat parade would be out of the question. His last check of the weather, just before he got in his staff car at Camp Pendleton, had completely dashed that hope. The weather was perfect and it was going to stay that way.

Major Malcolm S. Pickering, USMCR, was not in his room when he pushed open the door and marched in.

The nurse on duty in the ward said, "General, if you had asked me, I could have told you he's in the Officers' Club."

General Dawkins turned to Captain Arthur McGowan, his aide-de-camp.

"Go fetch him, Art. Bring him up here to his room," he ordered.

Major Pickering appeared in his room ten minutes later, smiling happily.

"May the major express his deep appreciation for the general's very timely interruption?" he asked.

"What the hell are you talking about?"

Major Pickering reached into the pocket of his hospital bathrobe and brought forth a very thick wad of twenty-dollar bills, which he waved happily.

"Straight poker," he said. "I was on a roll. I would never have been allowed to walk away from that table with everybody's money had this splendid young officer"—he pointed at Captain McGowan—"not marched into the Ping-Pong room and announced, 'General Dawkins's compliments, Major. The general de­sires to see you at your earliest convenience.' "

Dawkins smiled and shook his head.

"Art, give us a minute alone, will you?" Dawkins said.

Pick waited until McGowan had left the room, then asked, "Why do I think I'm not going to like this?"

"Sit down, Pick, and don't open your mouth until I give you permission. That's an order. Say, 'Aye, aye, sir.' "

"Aye, aye, sir," Pick said, and sat down in the folding chair.

"At 1700 hours this date, there will be a retreat parade at Camp Pendleton ..."

"Yes, sir?" Pick asked.

Dawkins held up his index finger, indicating he really wanted silence.

". . . in which," Dawkins went on, "approximately a regiment of Marines stationed at Camp Pendleton, plus approximately a heavy company—about six boot platoons—of new Marines who are graduating from the Marine Corps Re­cruit Depot, San Diego, as we speak, plus a company-sized group of Marines from Marine Corps Air Station Miramar, will participate. Additionally, there will be a flyover by fighter aircraft from Miramar and from Marine Corps Air Station El Toro.

"The purpose of this exercise is to present, under appropriate circumstances, various decorations to members of the Marine Corps. Fifteen decorations, in all, will be presented, ranging upward in prestige from the Purple Heart to the Navy Cross, which, as you know, is the nation's second-highest medal for valor. We are sure the recruits, now Marines, will be inspired to see all the heroes in the flesh."

He stopped, looked at Pick, and raised his index finger again.

"The reason for the Marines from Miramar and the flyover by planes from El Toro and Miramar is because the Navy Cross is to be awarded to one of their own."

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