parachute and fumble with his life jacket. A crewman with a gaff stood at the bow, ready to pull him in. Jap prisoners were rare; Iâd read about their last-ditch banzai charges and how theyâd commit suicide with grenades rather than be captured. But this guy waved his arms as if he couldnât wait to be hoisted aboard.
Cluster shouted an order to the engine room and the PT boat slowed as we came within reach. The sailor extended the gaff to the pilot who took hold of it, jerking on it suddenly and pulling the crewman into the water. He reached into his life jacket and came up with a pistol. He fired two shots at the bridge as he screamed, his face now contorted with hate and fury. Paddling with his free hand for a better angle, he squeezed off two more rounds, aiming at Cluster and his executive officer. He was so close, the machine gunners couldnât depress their guns to fire a burst at him. More shots rang out as the crew ducked for cover and the sailor in the drink swam for it.
Kaz and I drew our weapons. Kaz crouched behind the bulwark and fired over the top, hoping to distract him. Our first shots went wide, and I saw the pilot load a new clip into his automatic, all the while yelling what may have been curses at us or prayers to the emperor. I heard Cluster order the engine to be reversed as we popped up again and fired, only to duck as rounds whizzed by our heads.
âStay down,â a voice said from behind, followed by the welcome sound of a Thompson submachine gun wielded by a gunnerâs mate. He fired two quick bursts, hot ejected shell casings showering our shoulders. âNow you can get up, lieutenants. Welcome to the Solomons.â
We stood. The top of the pilotâs head was gone, the sea around him stained red.
âNice shooting, Chappy,â Cluster said, tossing a life ring overboard for the crewman still in the water.
âEveryone okay?â I asked.
âYeah, he put some holes in my boat but no one got hit,â Cluster said. âAnd for the record, that bulwark isnât metal, itâs plywood. If he shot at you through that, youâd get wood shards as well as a bullet.â Kaz rapped on the low wall and got the hollow sound of three-quarter-inch wood.
âIs there anywhere safe on this boat?â I asked.
âHell no,â Chappy, the gunnerâs mate, said. âWeâre a plywood boat sitting on three thousand gallons of high-octane aviation fuel. Thatâs why we like to go real fast.â
Recovering the gaff and the overboard sailor, Cluster had the pilotâs body pulled in to search for documents. There were a couple of maps in his flight suit and a picture of a young girl in a kimono in his shirt pocket. Cluster kept the maps. The body was tossed overboard, the photo flipped into the sea as an afterthought. The engines roared into life as the PT boat made for Tulagi and a safe harbor. Kaz and I stood on the bridge, the cool breeze and calm coastal waters a relief after the blood and terror of crossing Ironbottom Sound.
âI should have seen that coming,â Cluster said as the island loomed closer. âItâs never over with the Japs. The warrior code of Bushido and all that. They consider surrender a dishonorable disgrace to the soldier and his family.â
âItâs hardly surrender when youâre shot down during aerial combat,â I said.
âDeath in battle, especially if many enemies are killed in the process, is the most honorable fate for a Japanese soldier,â Kaz said. âTo that poor fellow, there was no difference between the machine guns in his fighter and the pistol in his hand. It is what he was taught.â
âI have a hard time thinking of him as a poor fellow,â Cluster said. âA classmate of mine, a marine officer, was on Guadalcanal in the early days. After a failed banzai charge at the Tenaru River, marines went out to help the Japanese wounded. The Japs set off
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