Cuttlefish
Posts: 2454
Joined: 1/24/2007 From: Oregon, USA Status: offline
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January 29, 1942 Aboard USS Gridley Location: 80 miles south of Carnarvon Course: East Attached to: TF 406 Mission: Air combat Ship's Status: Sys damage 4, engine damage 0 Fuel: 419 (79%) Darkness had fallen over the Indian Ocean but night did little to dispel the hot, turgid air below decks. Two small, wire-caged fans in the upper corners of the Communications division bunk room labored with little success to create a breeze. The upper bunks right below the fans were considered prime real estate, though. Bill Bonderman had not been aboard long enough to rate one of the fan-kissed bunks, so he reclined in his skivvies on a lower bunk, reading. He tried to get in some reading every evening before lights out. Signalman Jerome "Marbles" Jenks plopped down on the next bunk forward with a groan and began removing his shoes. He glanced over at Bonderman. "What'cha reading, Bill?" he asked. Bonderman slipped a finger into the book to hold his place and held it up so Marbles could see. "Ah, the Good Book," said Marbles. He peeled off his socks and leaned back. "Did I ever tell you fellows how the Bible saved my life one time?" There were several groans around the bunk room but most of the men leaned forward. Every ship had its share of liars and braggarts. Jenks was in a category by himself, though. His lies were works of art, his stories worth listening to even though no one believed a word of them. Back in Bonderman's native Texas the telling of "tall tales" was considered an art form, and Bill had rarely met a better practitioner. He nodded towards Jenks. "Ah don't believe you have," he said. "Well, it happened like this," said Jenks. "Back when I left dear old Baltimore to become a seafarin' man, my mother..." "I thought you said you were from St. Louis," said somebody. "I was born in St. Louis," Jenks said. "But my last year in school my ma moved to Baltimore. She had to, you see, because my step-dad turned out to be an old crony of John Dillinger and her wedding ring was part of a bunch of stolen diamonds. The Pinkertons were on the trail of the diamonds and there was no way my ma was going to give up that ring, so we changed our name and moved. Anyway..." "So Jenks ain't your real name?" asked somebody. "No," said Jenks without missing a beat. "It's actually Lugengeschichte." "Lugen what?" somebody said. "Rumpelstiltskin?" said someone else. Jenks waved a dismissive hand. "Not important," he said. "What is important is that when I left Baltimore, my mother gave me a bible. 'Son,' she said, 'keep this close to your heart always, for it will guide you through the wicked world out there and keep you safe from harm.' So I carried it in the left inside pocket of my jacket." Jenks looked around, but no one interrupted him this time. "I made my way to New York city," he went on, "where I intended to become a sailor. But the city was full of wicked lures for a young man away from home for the first time. Folks, I'm afraid I fell in among evil companions." "No!" said someone. "Shocking," said another. Jenks nodded. "I met a woman named Janelle LaPeur," he continued. "She was a raven-haired woman with a sultry air and the largest, most beautiful brown eyes I've ever seen. She was from New Orleans, and I suppose I should have guessed what she was from the fact that I met her in a place called the Voodoo Lounge. But I was young and inexperienced. Guys, let me give you a piece of advice. Don't get involved with women who carry little pouches of grave dirt around or who like to make creepy little dolls." "Ah'll keep that in mind," murmured Bonderman. "Things went pretty well for a while," Jenks said. "She was hot and passionate like no other woman I'd ever known. Then one day she found out my last name wasn't really Rockefeller. I've seen angry women before, but not like this. She raged at me and screamed something fierce. I was trying to calm her down before she clawed my eyes out when she started chanting in a language I didn't know and making weird gestures with her hands. I wasn't too worried, though, until she brought out one of her little dolls." The only sounds in the bunk room now were the occasional squeak of a bunk as a man shifted position and now and then a cough. "She held that doll up," Jenks said, "and then bent one of the legs sharply backward. I tell you, folks, it felt like someone had shot me in the knee. My leg buckled and I went down in a heap. I grabbed my leg and looked up at her and I could see that the little doll was dressed a lot like me. I don't mind telling you guys that I was suddenly scared spitless. There was fire in her eyes and I knew that I was looking through those lovely orbs into the fires of hell that awaited me. Then that woman bent the left arm back and I heard a snap as my own arm broke. I groveled on the floor, screaming. "She laughed at me, then, and while she was laughing I suddenly felt something warm against my chest. It was the bible my mother had given me. It was in my jacket pocket under me and it was so hot it almost burned my skin. I fished into the pocket with the one working arm I had left to me and brought it out. It was glowing with holy light, and when Janelle saw it she screamed and dropped the doll. "I dragged myself forward, still holding up the bible, and Janelle backed up against the wall behind her, holding her hands out in front of her. I got a little closer and, I swear I saw this with my own eyes, that woman suddenly burst into flame! She went up like flash paper, whoosh! In less than five seconds she was gone, leaving only a little bit of ash on the floor. That evil doll burned up in the same instant. "Well, suddenly I felt fine! My arm and leg didn't hurt at all. I stood up and got out of there in a hurry, let me tell you. The next day I enlisted in the Navy and that was that." There was silence for a moment. "You still got that bible?" someone asked. Jenks nodded. "I sure do," he said. He rummaged around and dug out a small, battered, black leather book and held it up. Men leaned forward. "It looks a little...scorched around the edges," someone said. "Yeah, it does, doesn't it?' said Jenks complacently. He put it away and said nothing more.
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