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RE: Small Ship, Big War

 
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RE: Small Ship, Big War - 10/30/2008 6:12:55 AM   
Mike Scholl

 

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From: Kansas City, MO
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quote:

ORIGINAL: kaleun

quote:

Oh yeah, the human race is enlightened. We're getting better & better at killing each other off all of the time


That's not really a contradiction. We can obliterate a whole city with a nuclear device but at the same time we are much more intolerant of civilian casualties than back in the 40s. No industrialized nation would condone carpet bombing a la Dresden or Hamburg.



I'm not so sure about that. Had you taken a poll in the US on 9/12 after the news reports showing Muslims in the streets cheering the results of 9/11..., carpet bombing with nukes might well have gotten a substantial majority..

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Post #: 3661
RE: Small Ship, Big War - 10/30/2008 2:37:49 PM   
kaleun

 

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Yes,  but it didn't get done. We (The USA) went at it in a different way that increases our military losses and decreases their civilian losses. Not saying that's right or wrong, just that even after 9/11, once given some time for emotions to cool down, civilian losses are very unpalatable to western countries. That is not the case for terrorists who target almost exclusively civilians, for that same reason.

I  don't want to hijack this threaf further with this topic, so we can continue via PM or start a new thread if needed.

_____________________________

Appear at places to which he must hasten; move swiftly where he does not expect you.
Sun Tzu

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Post #: 3662
RE: Small Ship, Big War - 10/30/2008 2:49:04 PM   
tocaff


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Enough of the hijack and back to our story.


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Todd

I never thought that doing an AAR would be so time consuming and difficult.
www.matrixgames.com/forums/tm.asp?m=2080768

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Post #: 3663
RE: Small Ship, Big War - 10/30/2008 9:53:27 PM   
Cuttlefish

 

Posts: 2454
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September 12, 1944

Location: Osaka/Kobe
Course: None
Attached to: Disbanded in port
Mission: None
System Damage: 0
Float Damage: 0
Fires: 0
Fuel: 475

Orders: Escort Hiyo to Tokyo

---

Nanami Ariga stands in front of her father’s cottage on Okinawa gazing down the slope of the hill towards the ocean. With Riku back aboard Hibiki she has returned to Okinawa with her grandmother, and here she will remain until the war is over. After the war, if Riku survives, there will be time enough to decide where they will live and to find a home.

Nanami is the daughter of a sailor and she has spent many hours of her life looking out at the sea and wondering where her father is and how he is doing. Now her father and husband both are out there. So much has changed and yet the ocean remains the same, the breakers rolling in long lines that stretch from horizon to horizon as far as she can see.

What would become of her, she wonders, if something happened to Hibiki? Her world would be shattered. In public, to be sure, it would be an honor to have husband and father both killed in action. Friends and acquaintances from the village would tell her how proud of them she must be. Oh yes, an honor indeed. But in private it would be a much different matter. Could anything ever stop the pain or heal the wounds if both of them were to die, she wonders?

With a rumble a military convoy begins to pass along the road just below the house. There are more and more soldiers here every month. It does not seem possible that the enemy could ever come to Okinawa but surely someone must think it might happen, or else why are the soldiers so busy?

She lifts her gaze from the trucks and back out to the ocean. Here on Okinawa women have always looked to the ocean and waited for their men to return. The ocean gives them much but it also exacts a price, and so the women wait and hope. There is little else they can do.

Down by the shore the long lines of waves continue to roll in, as they always have.




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Post #: 3664
RE: Small Ship, Big War - 10/30/2008 10:14:15 PM   
Capt. Harlock


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quote:

With a rumble a military convoy begins to pass along the road just below the house. There are more and more soldiers here every month. It does not seem possible that the enemy could ever come to Okinawa but surely someone must think it might happen, or else why are the soldiers so busy?


A beautiful vignette. I take it the Allied invasion of Tinian is not going quite as smoothly as the historical one. But with Guam and Tinian in American hands, Saipan will be starved into neutrality if nothing else. And then the road to Okinawa is open.

_____________________________

Civil war? What does that mean? Is there any foreign war? Isn't every war fought between men, between brothers?

--Victor Hugo

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RE: Small Ship, Big War - 10/30/2008 10:14:19 PM   
FeurerKrieg


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Beautiful imagery as always, CF.

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Upper portion used with permission of www.subart.net, copyright John Meeks

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RE: Small Ship, Big War - 10/31/2008 9:38:01 PM   
Cuttlefish

 

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September 13, 1944

Location: Osaka/Kobe
Course: None
Attached to: Disbanded in port
Mission: None
System Damage: 0
Float Damage: 0
Fires: 0
Fuel: 475

Orders: Escort Hiyo to Tokyo

---

Frank Barnwell pushes through the undergrowth, leaning heavily on the branch he is using as a makeshift cane. He isn’t sure whether his ankle is broken or just sprained, but it hurts like hell and he can’t put any weight on it.

He hates the jungle, hates it with a passion. He can’t even tell what direction he is traveling half the time. He is trying to go north, in hopes of encountering friendly troops, but the vegetation and terrain conspire together as if they were possessed of some malevolent will to thwart him. Barnwell half thinks they are.

He pushes ahead through the undergrowth and comes to a small turgid stream. His thirst swells as he looks at it and he kneels painfully and scoops up some water to drink. As he does so a tremor wracks his body. He knows he should boil the water or something but everything here is too damp to burn easily and he has not many matches. God knows what he’s contracted, malaria or dystenery or beriberi or dengue bloody fever. At least, he reflects, it probably won’t kill him before hunger, thirst, the Japs, or the terrain do.

Or tigers. He raises his head and there one is, sitting on the bank opposite and looking at him. He stumbles upright and fumbles out his pistol. The tiger doesn’t react. Christ, Barnwell thinks, the thing looks huge. It blinks at him lazily. No rush, the tiger’s look seems to say. You aren’t going far, human. And you are just going to get weaker and weaker. And when you fall down and can’t get up again I will pay you another visit. Maybe if you’re lucky I will make it quick.

The tiger blinks again, breaking the spell, then turns and vanishes into the brush. Scarcely a rustle marks its departure. Barnwell picks up his branch and hobbles off in the opposite direction. Maybe he should make some noise, he thinks. Start a proper fire or something. It might attract the Japs but at least they’ll feed him and give him medical attention. The Geneva Convention and all that. He got away from them once and would prefer to stay away but falling into their hands is better than dying of disease or being eaten.

He staggers on, unaware that not all that far away are thousands of his countrymen, prisoners already, who would disagree with that assessment.


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RE: Small Ship, Big War - 10/31/2008 9:57:25 PM   
kaleun

 

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quote:

Or tigers


Don't leave the boat!



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Appear at places to which he must hasten; move swiftly where he does not expect you.
Sun Tzu

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Post #: 3668
RE: Small Ship, Big War - 11/1/2008 3:26:47 PM   
BigDuke66


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Never ever leave the boat!!!

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RE: Small Ship, Big War - 11/1/2008 10:02:20 PM   
Capt. Harlock


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quote:

ORIGINAL: kaleun

quote:

Or tigers


Don't leave the boat!


Off-Topic but amusing: I saw "Apocalypse Now" in the Los Angeles Cinerama dome, one of the more impressive theaters. (Yes, I'm that old.) When the tiger appeared, my startled seat-mate spilled his popcorn on my arm, and to my excited survival instincts it felt like a near-miss of tiger claws. I don't think I went quite as much as a foot in the air, but it was close.

_____________________________

Civil war? What does that mean? Is there any foreign war? Isn't every war fought between men, between brothers?

--Victor Hugo

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Post #: 3670
RE: Small Ship, Big War - 11/2/2008 10:02:03 PM   
Marc gto

 

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this is an amazing a/r ..i started reading last week and needess to say i havent gotten any work done at home or the job :) great work cuttlefish

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RE: Small Ship, Big War - 11/3/2008 2:29:48 AM   
Xxzard

 

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You are making me feel bad for my campaign's Hibiki, which valiently battled Dutch surface forces along with some cruisers but got brutalized by some shells and a dutch aerial torpedo.

Its sitting at a jap controlled Kendari at about 60/50.

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RE: Small Ship, Big War - 11/3/2008 3:33:03 AM   
Cuttlefish

 

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Wolffpack has returned from his rotation and so the game is on again! It didn't take many turns this weekend to remind me that playing Japan in 1945 is not for the faint of heart, but I'm still pleased we have resumed. As for Hibiki...well, no hints except to say that though this AAR is a lot closer to the end than the beginning we aren't nearly done yet.

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RE: Small Ship, Big War - 11/3/2008 10:05:51 AM   
tocaff


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Nothing lasts forever.

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Todd

I never thought that doing an AAR would be so time consuming and difficult.
www.matrixgames.com/forums/tm.asp?m=2080768

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Post #: 3674
Der Rattenkrieg - 11/3/2008 10:34:45 PM   
Cuttlefish

 

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September 14, 1944

Location: Osaka/Kobe
Course: None
Attached to: Disbanded in port
Mission: None
System Damage: 0
Float Damage: 0
Fires: 0
Fuel: 475

Orders: Escort Hiyo to Tokyo

---

I wanted to post this on Halloween but didn’t get it finished in time. Here it is anyway. It’s a little (well, maybe a lot) off the wall but I hope it is entertaining nonetheless.

---

“I still think we should’ve tried that freighter back there,” says Pokey Pete as he and Gnawing Jack make their way down the pier, sticking to the shadows even though it is 3 am and no humans are in evidence. “I like freighters.”

Pete and Jack are both shades of gray. Many brown rats are, despite the name. Their scientific name, rattus norvegicus, is even more misleading. The point of origin of the species is not precisely known but it almost certainly was not Norway. Pete and Jack themselves prefer the term “wharf rats”.

“Naw, I’m looking for something better,” says Jack. The two of them round a stack of crates. “Ah, and there we are!” His whiskers twitch. “An Imperial Japanese Navy destroyer. First class travel, my friend. Come on, let’s join the navy and see the world!”

“A warship?” says Pete in dismay. “Are you sure? They’re so clean. Give me a nice messy freighter any day.”

“Yeah, but these days sailors are eating a lot better than civilians,” says Jack. “There’s going to be good food aboard, and plenty of it. Besides, I hear the war has really heated up to the south. We might call somewhere, jump ship, and pretty soon get a chance to get aboard an Allied ship heading back to Australia. That’d be great, eh? I hear those Australian she-rats are really something.”

“Yeah, or the ship might catch a torpedo or two and then we’d have to swim for it,” says Pete gloomily.

“Don’t be such a pessimist,” says Jack. “Besides, our chances are a lot better on a warship than on a merchie these days. Those Allied submarines are murder. I want to be aboard something that carries depth charges.”

“All right,” says Pete, “you talked me into it.” The two rats peer across the narrow stretch of water towards the destroyer. Pete reads the characters on the side. “Hibiki?”

“Yeah,” says Jack. “One of the special-type destroyers built in the early 30’s. Akatsuki-class, I think. I had a cousin who traveled aboard Shirayuki back before the war. That’s a Fubuki-class, pretty similar to this. He said they’re a pretty good ride, a little excessive roll in rough weather but nothing too bad.”

“The OOD looks alert and the gangway is well-lit,” says Pete, looking the situation over. “Rat-guards on all the mooring lines look secure.” His beady eyes fall on an electric cable which snakes from the pier to the ship. “Check out that cable. Think we can make it?”

“I think so,” says Jack. “Just don’t bite it. I had a cousin who bit a cable like that once and it fried him like an egg. Let’s go.”

Their plan works well and a short while later both rats are aboard. They slip silently along the scuppers, find an open hatch, and are soon below decks.

“See, what did I tell you?” Jack says. “Piece of cake.” They are now between the second and third decks, following a wiring conduit aft.

“I dunno, Jack,” says Pete, his whiskers twitching nervously. “It’s really quiet here. Why isn’t there anyone around?”

“They’re probably all in the food storage lockers gorging themselves,” says Jack. “Hey, here’s a nice nest.” They’ve come to a junction with a vertical pipe. Some enterprising rats long ago made a hollow in the insulation surrounding the pipe. The two rats poke their noses in. The nest is dusty and long disused.

“Weird,” says Pete. “I don’t even get much scent. No one’s been here in a long time.”

Jack slips inside. “That just means no one will complain if we move in,” he says. His front paw comes down on something round and hard. “Hey, what’s this?” He pokes at it. Insulation slips aside to reveal a grinning rat skull, incisors gleaming dully in the faint light. Jack recoils with a squeak.

“Something bad happened here,” says Pete softly. “Something real bad. I can feel it.”

“Quiet,” hisses Jack. “I hear something.” From down the conduit comes the rapid patter of feet and the sound of hoarse, ratty breathing. The two look, transfixed, and a brown rat comes into view, racing towards them. Its face is a mask of fear and they can already smell its panic.

It has nearly reached them when suddenly something huge looms behind it. It is a head out of nightmare, flat and scaled and with glittering, malevolent eyes. The fanged jaws gape wide and the head shoots forward with unbelievable speed. The jaws close around the torso of the newcomer with fearsome force.

The brown rat’s eyes bulge and a gush of blood stains its jaws. It scrabbles futilely as it is pulled relentlessly backward into the darkness, its front claws leaving long scratch marks in the floor. Before it is whisked out of sight it seems to see them for the first time.

“Run!” the brown groans. “Get out while you can!” Then it is gone. A moment later comes a hideous slithering sound, followed by a drawn-out squeak of agony and then the crunching and snapping of breaking bones. The conduit is filled with an awful reptilian musk and the scent of fresh blood.

Jack and Pete turn and flee as fast as their paws will take them. They retrace their steps in blind panic and don’t bother with the cable. They simply hurl themselves off the ship and into the ocean below. Later, back on the pier, the damp and shivering rats take a last look at the destroyer.

“So,” says Pete after a moment. “What do you say we try the freighter?”

“Sounds good,” says Jack. The two rats head back the way they came.


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Post #: 3675
RE: Der Rattenkrieg - 11/3/2008 10:51:10 PM   
FeurerKrieg


Posts: 3397
Joined: 6/15/2005
From: Denver, CO
Status: offline
Ah, a great horror tail !!

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Upper portion used with permission of www.subart.net, copyright John Meeks

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RE: Der Rattenkrieg - 11/3/2008 10:54:34 PM   
Feinder


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From: Land o' Lakes, FL
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Go Benzan! (or whatever her name is)
-F-

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"It is obvious that you have greatly over-estimated my regard for your opinion." - Me


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Post #: 3677
RE: Der Rattenkrieg - 11/3/2008 11:22:23 PM   
Reg


Posts: 2787
Joined: 5/26/2000
From: NSW, Australia
Status: offline

Bravo!!!






Attachment (1)

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Cheers,
Reg.

(One day I will learn to spell - or check before posting....)
Uh oh, Firefox has a spell checker!! What excuse can I use now!!!

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Post #: 3678
RE: Der Rattenkrieg - 11/4/2008 2:43:37 AM   
thegreatwent


Posts: 3011
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From: Denver, CO
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Bravo CF

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RE: Der Rattenkrieg - 11/4/2008 3:23:51 AM   
BrucePowers


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quote:

ORIGINAL: Feurer Krieg

Ah, a great horror tail !!


<GROAN>

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RE: Der Rattenkrieg - 11/4/2008 7:21:47 AM   
cantona2


Posts: 3749
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From: Gibraltar
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Classic

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1966 was a great year for English Football...Eric was born


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RE: Der Rattenkrieg - 11/4/2008 10:52:14 AM   
tocaff


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From: USA now in Brasil
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Gulp!

Now the Hibiki will have a rep amongst the rat population, The Ship of Death.


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Todd

I never thought that doing an AAR would be so time consuming and difficult.
www.matrixgames.com/forums/tm.asp?m=2080768

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Post #: 3682
RE: Der Rattenkrieg - 11/4/2008 2:55:45 PM   
Marc gto

 

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poor rats :)

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RE: Der Rattenkrieg - 11/4/2008 3:03:20 PM   
Marc gto

 

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Trick or treat lol

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Post #: 3684
RE: Der Rattenkrieg - 11/5/2008 12:50:35 AM   
Cuttlefish

 

Posts: 2454
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September 15, 1944

Location: Osaka/Kobe
Course: None
Attached to: Disbanded in port
Mission: None
System Damage: 0
Float Damage: 0
Fires: 0
Fuel: 475

Orders: Escort Hiyo to Tokyo

---

“Ah, there you are,” says Oizuma. He scoops up Benzaiten and deposits the large snake gently back in her crate. There is a distinct bulge in her middle.

“It looks like she has fed well,” comments Shiro, looking on from his hammock.

“Oh yes. That’s the nice thing about spending so much time in port,” says Oizuma. “In addition to fuel and food and things we also take on a fresh supply of rats.”

Shiro rolls out of his hammock and comes over to look at her. “I had not realized how much she has grown since I built that crate,” he says. “I think it is time for a new one, something much larger.”

“Take up a collection,” says Oizuma. “Half the crew is convinced that as long as Benzaiten is fine nothing bad can happen to this ship. You’d get enough money to build a fine home for her, I am sure.”

“Good idea,” says Shiro. He bends over the crate. “What do you think, Benzaiten, is it time for a new house?” The snake raises its head and looks up at him with her steady, lidless gaze. Her tongue flicks out once and then she lowers her head and stretches out to digest her meal.

“Was that a yes?” asks Shiro.

“More like a command, I’d say,” says Oizuma.

“I’ll get started right away,” says Shiro.


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Post #: 3685
RE: Small Ship, Big War - 11/5/2008 12:59:43 AM   
Cuttlefish

 

Posts: 2454
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September 16, 1944

Location: Osaka/Kobe
Course: None
Attached to: Disbanded in port
Mission: None
System Damage: 0
Float Damage: 0
Fires: 0
Fuel: 475

Orders: Escort Hiyo to Tokyo

---

The tiger is back. At least Frank Barnwell thinks it is the same tiger. He knows that he is far enough gone from hunger and illness that his judgment is a little suspect.

One thing he has no doubts about; this time the tiger means business. It is across a small clearing from him and slowly circling to the left, its eyes never leaving his. Barnwell draws his Enfield revolver and holds it in one shaky hand. He figures he can get off one shot if it charges him and wonders if one shot from a pistol can do anything but annoy such an animal.

He would open fire right now except that about half a mile back he had a close brush with a Japanese patrol. They didn’t see him but if he starts shooting he figures he will have more company, and quickly.

“The laddies or the tiger?” Barnwell mutters to himself, then giggles half hysterically. His fever is way up. The tiger halts for a second at the sound and tilts its head to one side, then crouches. This is it, thinks Barnwell. He raises the pistol.

Suddenly the tiger stops. It looks over its shoulder, then flows away noiselessly into the undergrowth. Barnwell stands there puzzled for a moment, unable to grasp his reprieve, and then he hears voices. They are Japanese voices, close by and getting closer. Barnwell staggers back against a tree. He would run but feels too weak.

Across the clearing appear three Japanese soldiers. They level their rifles at him and one barks a command. Barnwell drops the pistol and wearily raises his hands.

Two of the three soldiers stay back to cover him while one advances. He snaps something at the British airman, then grows angry and repeats it. When Barnwell just stares at him blankly the soldier pokes his bayonet into Barnwell’s ribs, hard enough to draw blood.

“Hey!” says Barnwell. “No need for that. I just don’t understand…” The soldier barks something else and pokes him again. Christ, thinks Barnwell, this idiot is going to kill me just because I don’t understand Japanese. A red stain begins to spread slowly across his shirt.

“Flight Sergeant Frank Barnwell, serial number 741599,” he says, speaking slowly and clearly. The Jap just stares at him. It is at this moment that he sees, over the shoulder of his tormentor, arms come out of the jungle behind the two rearmost soldiers. Hands clamp over their mouths and knives flash. The whole thing happens almost soundlessly. Barnwell knows he needs to keep his interrogator’s attention. He lets out a loud groan and slides down against the tree until he is sitting. It isn’t entirely an act. His interrogator looks at him, annoyed, and suddenly he too is muzzled and knifed from behind. As the soldier slides to the ground another soldier is revealed standing behind him, this one wearing the somewhat travel-worn uniform of a Chindit. Barnwell notes somewhat numbly that his savior is a Gurkha as the man matter-of-factly kneels and cleans his kukri on the Japanese soldier’s uniform. In the background Barnwell can see other soldiers fanning out and securing the area.

He turns his gaze to the fallen Japanese soldier. He is very dead, though his eyes are open and blood continues to pour slowly out of the massive cut in his ruined neck. Barnwell shudders. This is a lot bloodier and more up close than the kind of war he is used to fighting.

“What do we have here, then?” speaks a cheerful English voice. A British officer steps into view and looks down at the dead soldier. “Good work, Kulbir,” he tells the Gurkha. He shifts his gaze to Barnwell. “You look like hell, Flight Sergeant Barnwell,” he says judiciously. “We heard you talking to the Jap,” he explains in response to Barnwell’s puzzled look. “Name, rank, and serial number, good show. Can you stand?” He extends a hand and helps Barnwell struggle to his feet. “I’m Major Clifton, by the way,” he says. “Pleased to meet you and all that, but we really should be moving on.”

Barnwell tries a few steps and almost falls. Clifton steadies him with a strong hand and turns to the Gurkha. “Kulbir, tell Sergeant Nichols to rig a litter. Oh, and round up some food for the flight sergeant, will you? Thanks.” A soldier soon hands Barnwell a D-ration bar. It has the consistency and flavor of wood and Barnwell has never eaten anything so delicious.

A medic comes up and looks Barnwell over. He bandages the shallow bayonet wounds and tells Barnwell that he is suffering from both malaria and dysentery. He gives Barnwell some tablets and rigs a saline bag as Barnwell is placed on the litter. Major Clifton tells them that further medical attention will have to wait until they are far from here, then two soldiers pick up the litter and off they go. Clifton’s men fade into the jungle ahead of them as silently as they arrived.

Despite the occasional jostling Barnwell quickly grows very sleepy. His last thought, as he looks up at the underside of the jungle canopy, is to wonder if any of the rest of his crew has been found. Before he can ask, though, he is fast asleep.


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Post #: 3686
RE: Small Ship, Big War - 11/5/2008 8:43:03 AM   
gladiatt


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I'm glad to see Franck Barnwell will get out of this mess... for this time. I Like this character.

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Post #: 3687
RE: Small Ship, Big War - 11/5/2008 8:26:04 PM   
Capt. Harlock


Posts: 5358
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From: Los Angeles
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quote:

“The laddies or the tiger?” Barnwell mutters to himself, then giggles half hysterically


Good/rotten (pick one) pun!

_____________________________

Civil war? What does that mean? Is there any foreign war? Isn't every war fought between men, between brothers?

--Victor Hugo

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Post #: 3688
RE: Small Ship, Big War - 11/5/2008 10:03:52 PM   
Marc gto

 

Posts: 229
Joined: 9/25/2000
From: Batavia,ohio,usa
Status: offline
the cavalry has arrived

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RE: Small Ship, Big War - 11/6/2008 2:00:08 AM   
Skipjack


Posts: 408
Joined: 7/4/2006
From: Wisconsin, USA
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quote:

ORIGINAL: gladiatt

I'm glad to see Franck Barnwell will get out of this mess... for this time. I Like this character.



Ditto. I was hoping for a quick update, great to get a second adventure . Perhaps this is found in the latter chapters of his book

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