1275psi -> RE: Letters from a Prime Minister (5/5/2016 11:06:04 AM)
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May 29th For Navigators, Port Moresby is a barsted of a place. Its nestled beside a nice deep indent into PNG, a good harbour. To its east, another bay, Bootless inlet. Once into these bays, a sheltered harbour. At this moment, crude wharfing, and little else. But getting into there...... Only a kilometre out, a great barrier. facing you, as you enter on your left, low, hard, mean, Daugo island. Surrounded by reefs, lots and lots of reefs. Then a arse clinching gap, and then, surprise........endless reefs heading east. There is room to sail between the coast and this reef, past bootless inlet, if you are game enough. A battleship can cruise outside these barriers, so can cruisers. But if you want to get into that harbour......... Its bloody narrow is that gap. Bloody narrow indeed. Now, under the moon, still bright, it seems even narrower again. Destroyers Talbot, Monoghan lurk on the landward side of daugo island. Waiting in ambush. Concord, Bagely about 5 miles to the East. Destroyer Talbot see's them first. Cruiser Oi, a destroyer. Coming fast. Coming up that bloody gap past Bootless bay. Bold as brass. The range is stupidly close, 1000 yards, if that, when both sides see each other. There is no room to manoeuvre, to even react. Just to shoot, shoot anything, to throw lead, rocks, any bloody thing at the charging cruiser Oi veers hard left, spitting fire, bursting into it as well as talbots guns shred her. Incredibly, her navigator takes her clear into the pacific through that narrow channel, she and her escort vanishing into the dark. Talbot slides to a halt, aflame. Monoghan too stops, crippled. 3 minutes. Just three minutes to transform fine fighting machines to scrap. Talbot burns. She flames. A bright beacon in the night. On the seaward side of Daugo island, like moths, the flames draw Japanese and allied alike.
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