Declared Hostile (Miller) - страница 13

Once on the gently rolling platform, Wilson and Annie queued up to the barge which was bobbing alongside. In a chivalrous move contrary to naval protocol, Wilson boarded first and took Annie’s hand. In her heels, she expertly timed the roll and boarded. They joined other air wing officers in the forward cabin, all chatting amicably and excited at the prospect of going ashore. They then heard the 1MC blare from the ship towering above them.

Ding, ding, ding, ding. “Carrier Air Wing SIX, departing.”

Ding, ding, ding, ding.Coral Sea, departing.”

Ding, ding, ding, ding. “Staff, departing.”

Ding, ding, ding, ding, ding, ding. “Carrier Strike Group Eighteen, departing”… ding.

Minutes later, the Air Wing Commander, the carrier Captain, the Chief of Staff, and the admiral — resplendent in their summer whites and each with multiple rows of ribbons — emerged from the ship and onto the camel, boarding in proper order. The captain, an amiable helicopter pilot by trade, poked his head inside the forward cabin. “Hi, guys!” he said in his booming voice, quickly scanning the group in an informal muster. Without waiting for a response, he left to join the admiral in the aft cabin. as the seated officers smiled and waved back.

Captain Rick Sanders was a celebrity aboard Coral Maru, a nickname the crew used for the carrier. Each day he walked the ship from stem to stern, shook the hands of his enlisted sailors, asked them about their jobs or how things were going at home, and took time to pass the word over the 1MC on the upcoming schedule and to recognize top performers. Airman Schmuckatelli in the ship’s laundry, you are the winner of today’s Coral Sea “What-a-Guy of the Day” award. Female sailors appropriately earned the “What-a-Gal” award. Division officers and chiefs sometimes worried that the Captain handed out so many 96-hour liberty chits there would be nobody left to stand duty. Sanders didn’t care, and he smiled and pressed the flesh with the skill of any seasoned politician — which he was.

Rear Admiral Roland Meyerkopf, Commander, Carrier Strike Group Eighteen, was at the other end of the personality spectrum. A career submariner, nuclear-trained as was Sanders, Meyerkopf was tight-lipped and taciturn. His eyes lit up when he discussed issues related to the nuclear plant but became bored — or was more likely out of his depth — concerning issues related to the operational employment of this “bird farm.” Tall and almost completely bald, he went to the evening’s reception as he would to an inspection. Both events were to be feared lest he or one of his staff make an error, and small talk with strangers did not come easy to him. Once seated in the stern, his aide handed him a folder that included two sets of papers: the dossiers of the local civic leaders he could expect to meet, and his prepared remarks for a speaking responsibility he had not sought, but which he knew would be thrust upon him sometime during the evening.