The Favor
by L. Fox
The two main characters in this story are the property of MCA/Universal and Renaissance Pictures. Allother characters are mine except those two titans of American history; FDR and George C. Marshall. This tale depicts the two main characters as something more that just friends. This story also containsdescriptions of violence and many instances of graphic language including the "F" word so be forewarned. It also contains a few references to the Japanese people that are, of course, very inappropriate today but one must remember the time frame of this story, especially after the events of December 7, 1941.
It must be stated the "Legend of Monsopiad" related in this story is not mine. It is my understanding this is an actual Kadazan legend and while I did add some details to make it fit into context, the main part of the legend remains unaltered.
Chapter 1
New York City, November, 1941
Bam! Bam!
Bam!
"What the hell?"
Janice Covington rolled over and cast a bleary eye at the clock
by her bed. It read 3:20.
Bam! Bam! Bam!
"Go away!"
From the other side of the door a low voice said, "Open up
please. We need to talk to you."
As soon as Janice came to a sitting position on the side of the
bed her head began to feel as though
there was a little gremlin inside trying to bust his way out with
a sledgehammer. Blinking her eyes hard,
she looked ruefully at the well tapped bottle of Jack Daniels
lying on the floor and moaned softly. She
was just two days removed from a four month stay in the Andes
Mountains and had celebrated her
reception of a twenty thousand dollar check for the results of
her intense work a little too enthusiastically.
Bam! Bam! Bam!
"Miss Covington."
"All right. All right," she growled.
"Keep your shirt on, damn it." She reached under her
pillow and pulled
out the Colt .45 automatic she had recently bought to replace her
old revolver. Still somewhat groggy,
she weaved her way to the door. Without removing the chain she
cracked opened the door. Keeping her
.45 out of sight she peeked out and saw two men in dark suits,
obviously armed, standing there. She
cocked her head to one side and looked up the hall. There she saw
another man standing by the
elevator.
"Whaddaya want?"
"Miss Covington? Miss Janice Covington?"
"That's my name. Don't wear it out."
"We have to talk to you, Miss Covington. If you'll just let
us in..." The man put his hand on the door in an
attempt to push his way in.
"Not so fast, pal, " said Janice. "Just who the
hell are you anyway?"
Janice saw a hand stick a wallet through the cracked door. After
snatching the wallet out his hand she
flipped on the light switch. The picture was almost impossible
for her tortured eyes to make out and the
fine print was practically indiscernible but there was no
mistaking the big, bold letters FBI.
"You gonna let us in now, miss?"
"Yeah, sure," said Janice. "Just give me a
minute."
She went to the bed and put on the old, tattered robe she'd had
since her college days. Before returningto the door she carefully
tucked the automatic back under the pillow. She then opened up
the door and handed the ID back to the agent.
"So what can I do for you boys?" she asked.
"Miss Covington, there is a plane taking off for Washington
in...," he checked his watch, "exactly
fifty-two minutes. Our orders are to see that you are on
it."
"What is this? Some kind of a gag?" asked Janice.
"Do you see anyone laughing?" the other man shot back.
"Who's your playmate here?" snorted Janice. "J.
Edgar Hoover?"
"I'm with the United States Secret Service, ma'am," the
man replied, showing his ID. "I'm here to make
positive identification on you." He snapped his wallet shut
and returned it to his coat pocket. "I must
say, Miss Covington," he added, "you are a hard woman
to track down."
"Well you guys went through a lot of trouble for nothin'.
'Cause I ain't going anywhere with you," said
Janice.
The FBI agent set his jaw and looked at her as if she was Public
Enemy Number One. "Miss Covington,
one way or another you are going to be on that plane.
Now whether you walk on or we carry you on
makes no difference to me."
"You know the last time I checked this was still the USA,
not Nazi Germany," said Janice heatedly.
"Miss Covington, with all the trouble in the world right now
it's sometimes necessary to bend civil
liberties just a little, if you know what I mean."
"Okay, okay," she said evenly. She could see the man
was deadly serious. She slowly backed away
and said, "Let's not get excited."
"We knew you'd see it our way," said the G-man with a
politeness that was unsettling.
"Just let me get dressed."
"We're not stopping you," said the T-man.
"Is this how you guys get your jollies or something?"
smirked Janice.
"Sorry, ma'am, we can't take any chances. We were told you
could be ahh, 'resourceful', shall we say?"
He walked to the door and whistled softly to the man by the
elevator. When his cohort entered the roomthe G-man picked up the
blanket off the bed and handed one corner to him. They then
stretched it out to form a screen, their faces turned to the door
of the room.
Janice grinned slyly and said, "Okay, fellas. I get
it."
Having to dress in the same room with three armed men did not
disturb Janice Covington. In fact, not
much of anything fazed her anymore. She had, for the most part,
seen it all and done it all. As the
rogue, or black sheep if you will, of the archaeological world
she never played by anybody's rules. She
couldn't afford to. And anything like this that added to her
reputation as a maverick only made her standout more in a field
almost completely dominated by men. This attitude had served her
well in the past few years for during that time she had
consistently beaten those jelly-bellied pansies with their
pressed suits and their clean pith helmets to some of the most
startling finds of the day. The Star of Turkey, the lost city of
Pentacholpanec, the Xena scrolls...all were found by the gritty
daughter of Harry Covington after all the other
"experts" had given up hope.
No, it wouldn't do her any reputation any harm to be practically
abducted by government agents and
hauled off to Washington. But for what purpose? she wondered as
she buttoned up her shirt. She looked at the startled faces of
the three men and allowed herself a small grin of satisfaction.
The bastards expected me to wear a dress, she thought.
Well screw them. Janice Covington doesn't wear a dress for anybody.
She tucked in her shirt and stepped out from behind the blanket.
With an impish grin she made a big show of zipping up her khaki
pants. She noted with pleasure the envy in the men's eyes when
she donned the blue jacket with the famous NY logo on it. The
rare article had been given to her by an old college classmate
who now worked for the Yanks.
"Okay, crimebusters," she said snidely. "Lead
on."
For some reason her thoughts turned to Mel. Something like this
would scare her shitless, thought
Janice. It would be safe to bet a dollar to a doughnut that
Melinda Pappas would not have gotten dressed in front of any
G-men, or T-men, or X-men for that matter.
"You're really going out dressed like that?"
asked the Secret Service man. God, he thought, what will the Boss
think?
"Sorry, boys," sniffed Janice. "I'm not the pearls
and high heels type."
The man shrugged and picked up the telephone. "Give me room
216," he said. "Hello, Bob? We're
ready."
Suddenly a thought struck Janice. "Hey, what about the room?
And my things?"
"The Bureau will take care of the room," the G-man
assured her. "And your effects will be forwarded to
you in Washington."
Janice shrugged and said, "Good enough." She then
nodded toward the bed and added, "Be sure you
don't forget my 'friend' under the pillow."
The Secret Service man lifted up the pillow and whistled softly.
"Nice piece. You know how to use it?"
"Let's just say there's a couple of creeps out there who
thought they could muscle in on me walkin'
around now with enough lead still in 'em they don't need a radio
to pick up Little Orphan Annie," said the
archaeologist.
Ninety minutes later
Janice Covington was bundled up in the drafty hold of a
southbound C-47 trying
desperately to keep from freezing to death. Her light Yankees
jacket was of little help at nine thousand
feet on a cold November night. With her teeth chattering and her
uncontrollable shivering she was almost unable to express her
displeasure about the flying accommodations to the crusty
sergeant eyeing her from the other side of the plane--almost but
not quite.
"God d-damn!" she blurted out. The sons of
bitches could have told me it was a military plane, she raged
silently.
The sergeant rolled his wad of tobacco over his tongue and into
his other cheek and spit a large brown
glob on the floor of the plane. "What's the matter,
honey?" he smirked. "Ya ain't cold, are ya?"
Fucking smart ass, thought Janice. She looked enviously at his
thick sheepskin lined leather jacket and
gloves. "You wouldn't happen to have some more of those
lying around here somewhere would you?"
The sergeant grinned and spit again, this time much closer to her
feet. "Nope."
"Look sergeant," said Janice, "just what the
hell's eatin' you anyway?"
"What's eatin' me is I hadda get out of my warm bunk in the
middle of the night just to haul some dame's ass down to
Washington," rasped the sergeant.
"If you think it was my idea to be up here in this
ice box with wings in the dead of night you're nuts,
Buster," Janice shot back.
"Yeah, well dames don't belong on no Army Air Corps
plane," said the sergeant.
"Up yours," snarled Janice.
"What's going on back here?"
Janice and her antagonist were joined by a tall young man wearing
the single silver bar of a first
lieutenant.
"Ma'am, what seems to be the trouble?"
"Trouble? I'll tell you what the trouble is!" shouted
Janice, her anger rising with every word. "I'm back here
freezing my bazooms off and this palooka wants to give me a
lecture on army decorum!"
With a puzzled look on his face the lieutenant turned to the
sergeant. "Sergeant?"
"Sir?"
"Where's the flight suit we brought for this woman?"
"Well ah, sir, ya see...," the sergeant sheepishly
picked up the small tarpaulin he had been sitting on
and revealed the heavy flight jacket and pants lying underneath.
For Janice this was too much. "Why you son of a bitch!"
She lowered her head and launched herself at
the sergeant. She wrapped both arms around the man and drove him
backward until he slammed into
the side of the plane. Before the stunned sergeant or his
lieutenant could react Janice stepped back and punched him dead
in the nose. She drew back to hit him again but before she could
deliver the goods the lieutenant caught her arm.
"Ma'am. Ma'am! Don't." As the lieutenant
became more excited his voice went right up the scale.
"The bastard was holding out on me all the time!"
snarled Janice. "Let go of my arm!"
"Calm down, ma'am," the lieutenant pleaded. "I
think he's had enough."
By now the sergeant had his handkerchief out and was holding it
tightly under his nostrils. "You cwazy
dame," he honked. "You bwoke my doze!"
"Yeah? Well serves you right, asshole," said Janice.
"Uh, sergeant, I think you'd better come up front with
us," said the lieutenant with some amusement.
"We'd better see if we can get that bleedin' stopped."
The lieutenant took the sergeant by the arm and led him forward.
As he passed Janice the sergeant's
pride, which was hurting him much worse than his nose, would not
let him depart without comment.
"Cwazy dame," he muttered weakly.
But she was no longer paying attention to her victim. Already she
had the flight jacket on, snugly zipped
up, and was in the process of pulling on the flight pants.
The early morning sky
had broken clear over Washington and there was a crisp breeze in
the air. The
lieutenant pushed open the door of the plane and stuck his head
out. Normally this was the sergeant's
job but he had refused to get anywhere near the "cwazy
dame" again.
"Ma'am looks like you're expected."
Janice bent down and peeked out from the lieutenant's
outstretched arm. She saw the plane had taxied
to a remote spot on the airfield and parked with the door facing
away from the control tower. The
propellers on the twin-engined plane had not even stopped turning
yet and already a car was pulling up
next to them.
What is all this? Janice wondered.
She noted there were two men in the car and, for all she knew,
they could have been clones of the ones
in New York. The car had not come to a complete stop before the
man on the passenger side had his
door open. Without bothering to shut his door the man got out the
car and jogged to the plane.
"We're here to pick up Janice Covington," the man said.
The young lieutenant squinted suspiciously at them. "Ya'll
got some ID?" he asked.
"Look, Lieutenant, ah... what's your name?"
"Moore. Lieutenant Chris Moore, USAAF."
"Look, Moore, we don't have time to fuck around here. Miss
Covington is due at the White House
in forty-five minutes and if she's not there then your
ass will be the one that will have to explain to
General Marshall why she was late."
At the mention of the White House and the army chief of staff the
lieutenant decided this was way
over his head. "Sorry theah, padnah," said Moore, his
Texas twang involuntarily kicking in. "Jes'
checkin', that's all." He turned to Janice and said,
"Ma'am, ah reckon you're to go with these fellers."
Janice stepped to the door of the plane and crouched down to make
her leap to the ground. She
then turned to the amicable young man and, in the first real
display of warmth seen by Lieutenant
Moore, said, "Thanks, Lieutenant. Take care of
yourself." She then smiled and added, "Ya heyah?"
The lieutenant smiled and nodded but she was already gone.
Chapter 2
During the entire
ride from the airfield into downtown Washington not one word was
spoken by
anyone. Janice had been simply waved into the back seat of the
big Packard and her two escorts
had taken their stations up front. All through the trip the
driver steered the big sedan with both hands
firmly on the wheel and not once did he take his eyes off the
road. As they made their way through
the city she at first thought it odd that the streets would be so
empty at this hour but then the
realization came to her--this was Sunday. Most government offices
were locked up tighter than a jug
and even those that were not were manned by skeleton crews of
junior staffers.
She peered through the steamy window and again wondered what
possible reason could make the
government want to rouse a nobody like her out of bed and pack
her off to Washington D.C. in the
middle of the night. She remembered what the man had said at the
airfield. The White House? God,
she thought, you don't suppose...? Nah, Janice that's crazy. But
still, why else would she be taken
there? And then there was the matter of General Marshall. What
did the army chief of staff have to
do with all this?
Janice Covington did not have to keep up with current events
much. She didn't have to. She had
seen them first hand often enough. Besides what American didn't
know about how Hitler had
overrun Europe and was at this very moment pounding on the gates
of Moscow? Unlike most of her
countrymen at this time, she did not believe the war in Europe
was none of America's business. She
felt cultural ties with Britain were much too strong for the
United States to stand idly by let her fall. In
fact Janice was a little surprised her nation was not at war
already. At any rate she deemed
American participation in the conflict inevitable. It was only a
matter of when.
The Packard pulled to a stop and the driver exchanged a couple of
terse sentences with a uniformed
guard. As they drove past she wiped the steam on the window off
with the sleeve of her jacket to
get a look at the guard. He was wearing a long overcoat and she
really could not tell whether the
man was military or some other kind of security person.
A minute later the car came to a stop for the final time and the
man on the passenger side popped
out and opened the door for her. "Miss Covington? Follow
me." Janice sensed this was an order,
not a request.
Like most Americans of her day she had very little knowledge of
the White House. She knew what
it looked like, of course--well the front of it anyway for that
was what the newsreels and newspaper
photographs always showed. Now seeing it in person for the first
time, she was somewhat surprised.
She had thought it would be bigger. Janice would have liked to
just stand there for a moment to take
it all in but she was quickly hustled through a side door and up
a flight of stairs to the second floor.
There she was deposited into a plain hardback chair and told to
wait. Her two escorts then
disappeared and she was left alone except for yet another man in
a conservative suit at the far end of
the hall. Janice correctly guessed his job was to make sure she
stayed put.
She looked up at the various paintings on the wall and for a time
tried to guess who they might be.
However she quickly tired of this. She then stuck her hand into
her jacket pocket and extracted a
pack of Beeman's chewing gum. After unwrapping a stick she
remembered where she was, thought
better of it, and returned it to her pocket.
Fifteen, twenty, twenty-five minutes elapsed and by now she was
ready to explode. Janice
Covington hated to wait. Her impatience on a dig was legendary.
She had a reputation as a boss
who wanted things done yesterday. Now added to her discomfort was
the fact that her stomach was
beginning to protest being neglected.
Grrrrrrrrrr.... Her growling stomach could be plainly
heard in the quiet room. Boy, what I wouldn't
give for a stack of pancakes right now, she thought.
Finally, after what she was sure was a wait of a least three of
four hours (in reality fifty-six minutes)
she saw a trim, distinguished-looking man wearing what looked to
be an army uniform striding
purposefully toward her.
This is it, Kid, she thought, her anxiety returning.
As he neared Janice noted the man was about fifty-five or sixty
years of age and carried himself with
the bearing of someone who was used to being in charge. The four
stars on his shoulders were
merely confirmation of her assessment.
"Miss Covington?"
"Yeah."
"I'm General Marshall."
Having seen his picture in the newspapers many times she knew who
he was. "I know," she replied
quietly.
She wasn't the only one. Everyone in Washington knew who George
Catlett Marshall was. As the
most respected man in the armed forces he had an unbroken forty
year reputation as a man who
could get things done. From his graduation from the Virginia
Military Institute in 1901, through his
tenure as one of "Black Jack" Pershing's most trusted
aides in The Great War, to his now-famous
"Benning Revolution" in the early 1930's, George
Marshall's career had been one of exemplary, if
relatively anonymous, service.
That had all changed in 1938 when he was summoned to Washington
to head the War Plans
Division of the Army General Staff. This brought him in close
contact for the first time with Franklin
Roosevelt. Determined to keep his independence from the
charismatic Roosevelt, Marshall appalled
his fellow officers by refusing to allow the President to call
him "George." He also refused all
invitations to White House parties or weekends at Hyde Park, he
even refused to laugh at the
president's jokes!
But Roosevelt knew a gifted man when he saw one. Bypassing very
many officers who were senior
to him, Roosevelt in 1939 reached down and plucked out George C.
Marshall to be the next Army
Chief of Staff, the army's highest position. In one of those
ironies history is so fond of, George
Marshall was sworn in on September 1, 1939-- the same day
Hitler's Wehrmacht blitzkrieged into
Poland thus starting World War II. Since that day Marshall had
spent every waking moment
desperately trying to prepare an isolationist America for its
inevitable participation in the war.
During his many appearances before Congress at this time he
gained a reputation as a man of
unparalleled integrity. Democrats and Republicans alike were very
impressed by this austere, aloof,
but always truthful man from Pennsylvania. It had been Marshall's
candid testimony as the army's
sole witness during hearings to extend the Selective Service Act
that had been credited with saving
the force that he had so painstakingly built up through the 1940
peacetime draft.
With China ravaged, France beaten, England badly pressed, and the
Soviet Union hanging on by a
fingernail it had been one piece of bad news after another for
George Marshall. Now with
negotiations with the Japanese on the verge of collapse he knew
the situation was about as bad as it
could get.
But none of this constant weight on the man who would one day be
known as the "architect of
victory" was evident as he shook hands with the
tough-looking young woman. "I'm sorry you had to
wait so long," he told her.
"That's okay, I didn't mind," lied Janice.
"Would you follow me please?" Marshall led her down the
hall to an open room. Inside were two
men flanking a man sitting behind a desk and looking out the
window. The seated man's profile was
unmistakable.
Oh my God! thought Janice. It's him.
General Marshall rapped lightly on the door to announce their
presence. "Mr. President, Miss
Covington is here."
"Ahh splendid, splendid!" boomed the profile's voice.
"Show her in, General."
Franklin Delano Roosevelt, President of the United States gave a
subtle wave to the two aides and
they at once withdrew. As they passed by Janice one of them shot
an annoyed glance at her.
Marshall waited for the men to pass by and then stepped into the
room but poor Janice's motor
skills seemed to have deserted her. Her jaw dropped, her legs
felt like lead, and she found herself
unable to keep her hands from shaking.
Roosevelt wheeled himself out from behind the desk and rolled up
to the stunned archaeologist.
"Miss Covington," he asked, extending his hand,
"may I call you Janice?"
Janice weakly took his hand and with a Herculean effort managed
to gulp, "Of course, sir."
"Good, good," he boomed. "I find it helps matters
considerably if I can talk to people on a first name
basis." He looked at her with a devilish smile and added,
"I'm sorry if we have caused you any
inconvenience. Won't you sit down?"
For one panic-stricken moment Janice was ready to plop right down
on the floor and sit Indian-style
but General Marshall, mercifully reading the terror in her eyes,
discreetly nudged a chair her way.
"Uhh, thank you, Mister President," she stammered,
taking the chair.
Roosevelt tilted his head toward General Marshall. "You
know, the General there, he won't let me
call him 'George,'" he said with a sly smile. "Can you
imagine that? The President of the United
States can't call his Army Chief of Staff by his first name! Now
what do you think about that,
Janice?"
Poor Janice didn't know what to think. She looked expectantly at
Marshall and saw his face was as
blank as butcher paper.
"Mister President," said Marshall evenly, "I don't
believe my ability to serve you would be in any
way enhanced by familiarity. Besides, as you well know, I serve
at your discretion and if at any
time..."
Roosevelt threw back his head and laughed heartily.
"General, you know well enough that day will
never come." He leaned over and, in a conspiratorial tone,
whispered to Janice, "He knows I can't
do without him. Why I dare say I couldn't sleep at night if he
wasn't here." This last sentence would
be, in the future, uttered many, many more times by Roosevelt.
Janice smiled weakly and nodded. She then gulped hard and said,
"Mister President, if it's not too
bold of me, may I ask why I'm here, sir?"
The merry smile faded and in its stead appeared a much more
somber countenance. "We'll get to
that in a moment. But first..." He then turned to Marshall.
"...General," he said, "if you would be so
kind."
Marshall put on his glasses and opened up the manila folder he
had brought with him. "Miss
Covington, you once spent some time in Borneo, did you not?"
"Yeah," said Janice. She closed her eyes in thought and
added, "It was in late '37, early '38. I was
an assistant to Professor Jones then."
"So you are familiar with the island?" Marshall asked.
"Yeah, I suppose so," replied Janice. "The place
has everything from impenetrable jungle to
mountains to elevated plains."
"Janice?"
"Sir?"
Roosevelt looked her squarely in the eye and asked "What do
you know about the Rings of
Bugang?"
For a moment Janice sat there looking at him in stunned silence.
The legend of the Rings of Bugang
was known only to a very select few in the entire world.
"It's a very old legend," said Janice
cautiously.
"Could you tell us about it?" asked Roosevelt.
"Well it's a story that takes almost an hour to relate but
if you like I can give you a condensed
version," said Janice.
"Please do," said Roosevelt.
"The actual legend deals with a warrior named Monsopiad and
was originally told by Bianti, a
Bobohizan high priestess." said Janice. "He was born
and raised in a village called Kuai where his
grandfather was chieftain. It is said that when his mother was
pregnant with Monsopiad the sacred
bird Bugang made its nest on the rooftop of their house to lay
its eggs. When the time came for
Monsopiad to be born, so too, was it time for the eggs to hatch.
Monsopiad's father, Dunggou,
looked upon the coincidence as a good omen. So whenever the baby
Monsopiad was given his
bath, Dunggou brought down the baby birds to bathe with him. He
did this until the birds were finally
big enough to fly and leave the nest. The sacred bird Bugang was
so grateful to Dunggou for his
hospitality that if flew to the sea and returned with a coral
necklace featuring four rings of pure gold.
It was said that the rings represented the power of the four
winds and whomever possessed it would
be invincible in battle. When Dunggou explained to Bugang that he
was too old to be a warrior
anymore the bird told him the necklace was for the boy and was to
be placed around his neck when
he reached fifteen years of age.
Kuai was a small village and did not have enough warriors to
protect it so very often during
Monsopiad's childhood his village was subject to attack and
plunder by robbers. During these
attacks the villagers would have no choice but to flee to the
nearby jungle and hide until it was safe
to return to their homes. During these attacks Monsopiad would
watch from his hiding place, clench
his fists in rage, and bite his lip so hard the blood would
freely flow.
As the young Monsopiad grew he took to his warrior training
naturally and eventually became a
skilled fighter, learning to handle every weapon with ease. When
he turned fifteen his father placed
the necklace on him and told him its purpose. Then and there
Monsopiad vowed he would someday
rid his village of its tormentors once and for all.
One day while Monsopiad was working in his father's rice field a
group of women came to him and
began to berate him for working so hard, saying it was a waste of
time and effort as most of the
fruits of his labor would be enjoyed by the robbers who always
struck shortly after harvest. The
women also ridiculed the men of their village, calling them
weaklings for not being able to defend
their village effectively.
Monsopiad, angered by such mockery, vowed to start looking for
the robbers the very next day
and, once found, kill them. He told the women he would cut off
the head of the robber leader and
bring it back to his village as a trophy to be hung from the roof
of his house. He told them he would
take three youths with him to bear witness to his deed. The
youths would then return to Kuai ahead
of him to announce his success and herald his impending arrival
by blowing on a bamboo trumpet.
Monsopiad said that in response, the women must put on their best
costumes, bear bamboo trays
and give him a grand warrior's welcome. If they did not he would
kill them all. The women promised
that, if Monsopiad succeeded, they would do as he wished.
Early the next morning Monsopiad set out with the three youths in
search of the robbers who had
been victimizing his village. He finally found them five weeks
later and a bloody fight ensued. As he
promised, Monsopiad fought the leader of the robbers and beheaded
him. Seeing their leader dead,
the remaining robbers fled for their lives. The three youths who
had been watching the battle ran
back to Kuai as fast as they could. When the people of the
village heard the bamboo trumpet they
were at first confused and frightened for they had not expected
Monsopiad to be successful in his
quest.
The women who had mocked him were terrified for they had never
before welcomed a warrior
home and remembered Monsopiad's threat to kill them if they did
not fulfill their promise.
Fortunately for them, a priestess knew what to do and gave them
instructions. The women, bearing
bamboo trays and led in by the priestess, formed a procession and
the entire village joined in. They
began singing songs of victory as soon as Monsopiad entered the
village. The sight so inspired
Monsopiad that he vowed to wipe out all the enemies of
his village.
As the years passed Monsopiad continued relentlessly with his
self-imposed mission and in time, no
robber or evil warrior dared come near Kuai. Through all this
time the necklace he wore always
gave him strength and protected him. He had by then, however,
become an obsessed man who
resorted to provoking other men into fighting him just so he
would have an excuse to kill and behead
them. Of course this made the other villagers, including
Monsopiad's close friends and the other
warriors, wary and extremely afraid of him.
Finally a group of brave warriors got together and decided that
despite his heroic deeds,
Monsopiad's uncontrollable desire to kill had made him a grave
threat to the village and therefore
must die. Late one evening, while Monsopiad was resting in his
hut, the warriors made their move.
Monsopiad put up a fierce fight but he discovered he no longer
had the strength he once had. Too
late he realized that by abusing the special power bestowed on
him by the sacred bird, he had
gradually become a common man. Monsopiad lost his life that day
but the villagers still held him
dearly in their hearts for he was, after all, still the man that
had vanquished all their enemies.
He had, in all, collected the heads of forty-two powerful
warriors, a feat which no other man could
equal. The villagers forgave Monsopiad for his mistakes and in
memory of his good deeds erected a
monument in his honor and renamed their village after him.
It was said that Bugang was so saddened by Monsopiad's downfall
that she returned the necklace
with the four rings to the sea and vowed never to help man
again."
Roosevelt leaned back in his chair and adjusted his pince-nez
glasses. "You told that marvelously,"
said Roosevelt. "Have you ever considered writing?"
"Not really, sir," said Janice. In truth early in her
career during one of her longer jobless stints she
had in fact thought about chucking archaeology and trying her
hand at writing. She knew he had
something of a gift for it.
Of course FDR already knew all about this legend, having been
briefed twice on the subject by a
noted archaeologist from Georgetown. What he had really
wanted to know was whether this woman with the rowdy reputation
was as knowledgeable as he had been led to believe. It was
obvious to him now that she was. However there was the matter of
her trustworthiness. The woman had a reputation for being
unscrupulous. After closely studying her background several of
his advisors had cautioned him against using her. But Franklin D.
Roosevelt had wanted to see for himself. He had not been elected
President of the United States three times because he didn't know
people. Great or small, friend of foe, FDR had a gift for sizing
people up quickly.
Now, after studying the young woman sitting nervously a few feet
from him, he had decided that
Janice Covington, like millions of others Americans, had simply
been molded by the trials of the
Great Depression. He looked at the hard, but youthful, face and
saw eyes that should have belonged
to someone much older. During his travels across the country he
had seen those eyes many times. It
was plain the woman had experienced a lot in her short life and
very much of it had not been
pleasant.
Her credentials confirmed, it now fell to Roosevelt to decide if
she could be trusted on this matter.
Well, he thought, let's find out. "Janice?"
"Yes, sir?"
"Can I trust you? Let me rephrase that. Can America
trust you? If circumstances arose where your
services were needed could you be counted on to come to the aid
of our nation? You need not
answer as a citizen to the President," said Roosevelt,
"but simply as one American to another."
Janice pressed her lips together tightly and looked down at her
feet. "Mr. President," she began, "I
won't try to soft-soap you. I'm not a weepy-eyed patriot.
Everything I have achieved in life I had to
fight and scratch and claw for. America, or nobody else for that
matter, ever went out of their way
to help me. When I was in college I had to take every dirty job I
could find just to earn enough
money to stay in school. I sold tickets at the local movie house,
I waited on tables at a half-dozen
greasy spoons, I scrubbed floors at the hospital for twenty-five
cents an hour. I used to sometimes
go to class so tired I couldn't even take notes. I'd just sit
there and stare like zombie. I was smarter
than any of those rich, bubble headed sorority girls in my
classes but I had to settle for B's and C's
because I was just too tired from working all the time to study
as much as wanted to."
She smiled ruefully and added, "You know, all the time I was
in school I had one coat and two pairs
of shoes. And then when I graduated do you think I had it any
better?" She snorted and answered
her own question. "Not a chance. It took me a year of
knocking on doors and practically begging
before someone finally decided to take a chance on me--for much
less money of course. Why?
Because I was a woman and every day I had to prove myself to the
other archaeologists on the
site."
It was here she paused before continuing. "I know America is
a great country, sir, but that still
doesn't mean that unfairness and intolerance should be condoned.
There are a whole lot of people
that are smart or gifted in some way that don't get much of a
fair shake in this country. And that's all
they're asking for, Mr. President, a chance."
"I understand how you feel," said Roosevelt. "But
that still doesn't answer my question. Can America
depend on you?"
"I know what they say about me," said Janice, barely
hiding her bitterness. "I'm a money-grubber,
I'd stab my own grandmother in the back if it was to my
advantage. I'm sure your people told you all
about that didn't they, sir?"
Roosevelt nodded his reply.
"Mister President, all I can say is I may not be anybody's
ideal of a model American citizen but I am
a loyal one."
Roosevelt leaned over and patted Janice on the knee. "Child,
that's all I wanted to know." He nodded to Marshall and
said, "Please continue, General."
"About a month ago Navy intelligence began receiving reports
from their man stationed on Borneo
that several Japanese agents had arrived there. These reports
indicated the Japanese were offering
twenty thousand dollars in gold to anyone who could produce the
Rings of Bugang."
"But why?" asked Janice, furrowing her brow. "I
mean, we're not sure they even exist."
"They exist," said Marshall, matter-of-factly.
"The Navy's man has them. At least we think he has
them."
"What do you mean?"
"He was supposed to have taken a supply boat to Singapore
but his contact there reported he never
got off the ship," said Marshal. "The last thing ONI
heard from him was a report that he had the rings. That was ten
days ago."
"Why don't you send someone down there to look for
him?" Janice asked.
"We are," said Roosevelt. "You!"
"Mee? But I don't know anything about..."
Roosevelt cut short her protest with a dismissive wave of the
hand. "Oh come now, Janice," he said.
"Don't be modest. We know all about your ah, adventures,
shall we say? We feel you're exactly the
right person for the job; the perfect combination of an extremely
knowledgeable archaeologist and
someone more than capable of looking out for their self."
"What we want you to do, Miss Covington, is go there and
find our man, verify the authenticity of
the rings, and help our man get out," said Marshall.
"I see," said Janice. "Let me ask you something.
Why didn't you have somebody either with this guy
or already down there to tell him if the rings were genuine or
not?"
"We did. Unfortunately he died under mysterious
circumstances before he could do that. We think
this forced our man to gamble that the rings he had located were,
in fact, the real ones," said
Marshall.
"Mysterious circumstances huh?" Janice grinned wryly.
"I'll bet."
A little voice in the back of Janice's head suddenly began to
sound out a warning. "Things are
happening way too fast here, Kid. Watch your step."
"Do you think you could do that?" asked Roosevelt.
"Well obviously, I can't tell you if they're the real thing
or not," replied Janice. "After all, no one has
seen them. I should be able to tell if the workmanship is of the
correct time period, though."
"That's all we are asking," said Marshall.
"May I ask what all the fuss over a bit of gold and some
coral is?" asked Janice.
"I'm afraid we can't tell you that as this point in
time," replied Marshall. "Suffice it to say we believe
that if the Japanese are willing to pay that much out of their
dwindling gold reserve for this item then
it must be something they deem advantageous to possess. Therefore
if follows if they want it, it is in
our best interests to make sure they do not obtain it."
"Janice, I can't order you to go, not even the
president can do that," said Roosevelt. "But I can
and
I am asking you if you would do it as a personal favor
to me." Wiley politician that he was, Roosevelt already knew
the answer. What was she going to say, no?
Janice took a deep breath and said, "Okay, I'll do it."
Marshall immediately handed her a sheet of paper. Janice glanced
at it and saw it was an itinerary and, at the bottom, an
address--written in longhand.
"Please memorize this and then destroy it," said
Marshall.
Janice looked again at the paper and read the names...Pearl
Harbor...Guam...Clark Field. Military
transport all the way, thought Janice glumly. That's just ducky.
As if reading her mind Marshall said, "Of course there are
more commercial means of reaching the
island but they are sporadic and unreliable at best. We need you
down there as quickly as possible."
Janet merely nodded. At this point one of the aides rapped
lightly on the door.
"Sir, it's time."
"Thank you, Robert," said Roosevelt. He looked at
Janice and smiled jovially, "It's time for my
swim."
She saw Marshall take off his glasses and close the folder and
took this as her cue to rise. She knew
it was now or never. She had to know.
"Ahh, sir?"
"Yes, Child?"
"Why me? And why did you personally ask me? I mean you must
have dozens of guys that could
have handled this for you, right?"
Roosevelt looked up at her from his wheelchair and said,
"Young lady, now it's my turn not to soft
soap you. As you probably know from the news we are at the
present time conducting negotiations
with the Japanese. What's not generally known is those
negotiations are going very badly. So badly
in fact that we feel there is a distinct possibility we could be
at war by New Year's. The reason I
personally asked you to go is because if war does break out we
expect Borneo to be one of the first
places the Japanese hit. And it goes without saying that it could
very well be you would end up on
your own down there." He paused and added, "That's why
we chose you. You seem to have a
resilience, a never-say-die quality about you. You see, our man
is being watched very closely over
there and if he is to get out of the country with those rings he
is going to need the help of someone
that knows their business. That's you, my dear. And times being
what they are, I didn't think it was
appropriate to have anyone but me ask a private citizen to place
their self in such a potentially
dangerous position." He then looked at her puckishly and
added, "Besides, Eleanor is always after
me to give the women of this country more responsibility."
"I understand, Mister President," said Janice quietly.
Roosevelt rolled his chair to the door and looked back. "Oh
by the way, Janice, you were wrong
when you said you never got a thing from America."
"Sir?" Janice asked quizzically.
With a kindly smile the great man said, "Opportunity,
Janice. You got an opportunity. Do you realize
how many peoples there are in the world that wish for that with
all their hearts every day?" The aide
took control of Roosevelt's chair and he was gone.
"It will take some time to firm up transportation,"
said Marshall. "In the meantime arrangements have
been made for you to stay at a hotel downtown. Your things should
reach you there. When we are
ready to move we'll call you."
"Ahh, General?"
"Yes?"
"I'm sure you already know this but I have a..." Janice
almost said 'friend,' "...colleague who assists
me ..."
She was correct, Marshall did know. In fact he knew everything
about Janice Covington and Melinda Pappas because the FBI had
been conducting an intense investigation of them for the past two
weeks. "If you feel Miss Pappas will be useful feel free to
take her along," he told her. "But I advise you to
fully explain the situation to her first."
"I will," Janice promised.
As if by magic the two men that had brought her there now
suddenly reappeared.
"Good bye, Miss Covington, and good luck," said
Marshall, extending his hand.
"Thanks," mumbled Janice. Only now was the enormity of
it all sinking in. Jesus, she thought, I met
the President of the United States!
Chapter 3
Janice drained the last of the
scotch in her glass and reached for the telephone. It was time.
"Hello,
operator? Could you put me through to Columbia, South Carolina
please? I want to speak to a Miss
Melinda Pappas. Yes, that's right, Pappas, P-a-p-p-a-s. The
number is CYpress-6199. Yes, I'll
wait."
It was now 7:30 on the east coast. Janice knew that Melinda...Mel
would be home by now. Despite
her southern charm and quiet beauty, Mel had not proved to be one
of those Southern belles that
had to fight off beaux. Stupid idiots! thought Janice as she
waited for her connection.
Finally on the other end, that unmistakable drawl,
"Hello-oo?"
"Mel?"
"Janice, is that you?"
"Yeah, Kid, it's me. Listen up, I need you to come up to
Washington right away, okay?"
"Yuh mean Washington D.C.?"
"No, Mel, I mean Washington, Indiana. Of course I
mean D.C."
"But I thought you were goin' to New York," said Mel.
"I did but, ah, something came up," said Janice.
"Is it another job?" asked Mel excitedly. "Can I
go?"
"Can't say over the phone," said Janice. "But I do
need to talk to you."
"But Janice...I can't..."
Janice read the sense of urgency in her friend's voice. "All
right, Mel, what is it?"
"Way-ul, you see I sorta promised Momma I'd take her to the
movies to see "Suspicion" this evenin'
at the Bijou theater. See, she's a big fan of Cary Grant and, to
tell you the truth, so am I and..."
Janice knew it was no use. "Okay, okay," she sighed.
"Take your mom to the movies. You can take
the overnight to Washington later."
There was a pause on the other end of the line.
"Janice?"
"What?"
"Are you all right?"
480 miles away the archaeologist could not help but smile.
Melinda Pappas was nothing if not
thoughtful. "Sure, Mel. I'm fine. Just get your can up her
pronto. Be sure to pack a bag--and bring
your passport."
"Ahhlll be there," Mel assured her.
"Good." Janice gave her the name of her hotel and her
room number. "And Mel, don't tell anybody
you're comin' up here, you understand? Not even your mom."
"Okay, Janice, if you say so," said Mel. "But
golly, you make it sound like we're goin' on a secret
mission or somethin.'"
She did it again, thought Janice. How does she do that?
"Just be careful okay?" she replied lamely.
"Good night, Janice."
"Good night, Kid."
After replacing its receiver in the cradle Janice Covington
continued to stare at the phone for some
time. As mightily as she had tried to dislike Mel at first she
found it was just not possible. There was
no denying she was a ditzy clutz who was forever trying Janice's
patience but she was also the
embodiment of all that was good in people. She was kind, gentle,
smart, compassionate. From that
first day in Macedonia it had been a classic case of opposites
attracting. From Janice's perspective
the tall, shy, woman should have been all that she had once
hated; a flighty young woman from a
privileged family. But it wasn't so.
From no less an authority that the spirit of Xena herself Janice
had learned the two of them were
merely modern manifestations of a bond formed more than three
thousand years ago. A bond that
had not weakened with the passing centuries. Many times since
learning this revelation Janice had
wondered how often the two of them had found each other again
over the ensuing centuries. There
was no doubt Janice felt the bond tugging at her. Though
reluctant at first, she had come to care very
much for the gentle southerner. Melinda Pappas was the first
human being since the death of her
father that Janice Covington thought of as more than someone to
be used.
She poured herself another scotch and lay down on the bed. I
wonder what it would be like to...
aww, Janice, that's crazy, she thought. She shook her head as if
to clear the fog. "Janice, that's
crazy," she repeated, this time aloud. She turned on the
radio and the strains of Tommy Dorsey's
band poured forth into the room like fine wine. Like every other
woman in America under the age of
forty she was a Sinatra fan. The music made her turn once again
to thoughts of that soft voice, that
lovely face, that gentle heart. At last she fell asleep on the
bed, still fully clothed, her glass spilling
onto the floor. Janice lay there all night dreaming of presidents
and cold airplanes, of grim men in
dark suits and hard-backed chairs--and she dreamed of Mel. It had
been a long day.
The knocking on the door was so
soft Janice barely heard it. "Yeah, whaddaya want?"
"Janice? Janice, it's me, Mel."
Janice rolled out of the bed and stood up. "Ohhhh,
God." she groaned. The gremlin and his
sledgehammer had returned.
She stumbled to the door with her hand on her forehead. It took a
few frustrating moments of
fumbling with the latch before she was finally able to open the
door. And there she was. Janice
squinted up at the woman and grinned, "'Bout time."
A product of a tradition rich Southern family, Mel was, as
always, immaculately dressed. She wore
a dark blue skirt that just covered her knees and a brilliant
white blouse buttoned up all the way to
the top. Black pumps and a nicely cut blue jacket that matched
her skirt completed the conservative,
but very pleasing, look. In one hand she clutched a small hand
bag and in the other a pair of black
gloves. Over one arm was draped her tan overcoat.
Melinda took one look at her groggy friend, put her hand to her
mouth, and uttered her favorite
expression, "Oh my!"
Janice squinted up at her through the one eye that seemed to be
the least clouded. "Wassamatter?"
she asked.
"Janice I do declare you look like Sherman's army came
through here and marched all over you."
Janice grinned again and said, "Don't worry about it, Mel. I
feel a lot worse than I look." She picked
up her friend's suitcase and stretched out an arm. "Won't
ya'll come in?"
Mel stepped into the room and the first things she saw were the
bottle of scotch on the night table
and the glass lying still lying on the floor. "Janice!"
she gasped softly. "You've been drinkin'."
"Good work, Mister Moto," said Janice playfully.
"What tipped you off?"
Mel, however, was not amused. "Janice, you promised me you'd
try to take better care of yourself."
The archaeologist could see how deeply concerned her one true
friend was. Yes it was true Janice
Covington was known to crack the seal on a whiskey bottle every
now and then but she never, ever
drank when Melinda was around. She didn't need to. Melinda was
miffed to be sure but she wasn't
about to beat Janice over the head too much over it. After all,
only she knew how lonely a person
her friend really was.
"I only had a couple," lied Janice.
It was a lame attempt to placate her friend but Mel was not
buying any of it. "I'm sure," she
answered, a little icily.
God damn it! thought Janice, her famous temper flaring.
Why do I take this from her? If it was
anybody else...
Melinda tossed her gloves, coat, and hand bag in a heap on the
bed and turned to face Janice.
"Have yuh had anything tuh eat? I mean like, oh say, in the
last couple of days?"
"Yeah," Janice shot back a little defensively. "I
had a hamburger and milk shake yesterday evening."
Mel sighed and shook her head. "Janice I swear you worry me.
It seems like when you ain't on a dig
you try your darndest to wreck yourself."
She reached out with both hands and took Janice by the shoulders.
With surprising ease she spun
the smaller woman around and pointed her toward the bathroom
door. Over the past few months
Janice had come to learn just how deceptively strong Mel really
was.
"Now you jes' march yourself right in there and take a nice,
warm bath an' you'll feel much better. I'll
call room service and have 'em bring up something for ya."
"But I don't have anything clean to wear," Janice
protested mildly. "My things haven't arrived yet."
"Oh for Pete's sake don't worry. I'll send 'em out and have
'em cleaned," said Mel.
Janice nodded weakly and made her way to the bathroom. She had to
admit she did like it when
Mel fussed over her like this. It made her feel good to know somebody
cared for her. She closed
the bathroom door and began to run water into the tub. Next she
peeled off her clothes and threw
them in a pile by the door. After turning the water off she
walked to the door and scooped up her
clothing. Deliberately not bothering to cover herself with a
towel she opened the door.
"Here ya go," she said, tossing the clothing on the
floor. Mel was on the phone with room service so
Janice lingered at the door until she was done. "You're
never gonna believe who I saw yesterday."
Like a teasing school girl she wanted to make sure Mel saw her.
Mel did see her. "Janice!" she scolded gently.
Janice, however, noted Mel was not blushing as she had expected
her to do. She also saw she was
taking in every inch of her.
Melinda quickly strode to the door and gently tried to push it
shut. "You git in there and take your
bath."
"But Mel I saw--"
"Whomever it was, it can wait."
Thirty blissful minutes later Janice finally summoned up enough
resolve to pick herself up out of the
tub. Mel had been right. She did feel better. She towelled off
and combed back her hair. Wiping
away the steam from the mirror she stepped back and eyed herself.
"Not bad," she allowed
admiringly. "Not bad at all."
It wasn't very often that Janice Covington allowed herself to be
a woman. It was her belief that in her
line of work being female was a luxury she just could not afford.
She knew that if she exhibited any
weakness at all the barracuda rivals of hers would eat her alive.
She was still staring at herself when
she heard a soft rap on the door.
"Janice?"
"Yeah." She wrapped the bath towel around her and
opened the door.
"Here, put this on." said Mel, handing her a white bath
robe.
Janice took the robe and in a rare moment of tenderness touched
Mel on the forearm. "Thanks,
Mel."
Slightly taken aback, Melinda did blush this time and Janice felt
a little ashamed for her previous
clumsy attempt at exhibitionism. She slipped the robe on and
found it way too big for her. In fact it
was touching the floor. In vain she tried to reach around behind
her and take up the robe's belt.
Seeing her friend's difficulty, Mel quickly came to her rescue.
"Here, let me help." She ran both arms
around Janice and took up the ends of the belt. "I've been
meanin' to get a new one," she said
apologetically. "The belt loops on this ol' thing are
broken."
Mel was so close Janice could smell her and even without perfume
on she smelled... sweet. Mel was
much taller than Janice and her breasts were now sooo
invitingly close to her. As they came closer
Janice was certain she was not the only one that felt stirrings
within her. The look on Mel's face was
like none Janice had ever seen before.
Melinda looked down at the woman with her still-wet hair combed
straight back and was struck by
just how young she really was. She knew they were roughly the
same age but somehow she had
always thought of Janice as someone...older. Over the past months
they had spent quite a lot of time
together and by now both of them were fully aware there was
something special between them. But
that "something" was just like a wild stallion yearning
to be free but was cruelly pent up inside a
strong fence. No matter how desperately the horse might try to
knock the fence down it was just too
strong. The fence that barred the union of Mel and Janice's
hearts was a particularly cruel one for
both of them had supplied materials to build it with. Mel's
shyness and timidity made for stout fence
posts and Janice's stubborn refusal to allow anyone to
get close to her after a lifetime of pain
provided the railing. But like the stallion their hearts would
not give up. They might be stopped today
or tomorrow, but someday...
Mel carefully pulled the ends of the belt around and gently tied
them off. For once she dropped the
veil of Southern propriety and said softly, "You know,
Janice, you're quite a lovely woman when you
allow yourself to be."
Janice had to admit she found this rarely seen side of Mel
exciting. Gone was the timid young clutz
and here in its place was a strong, confident woman. Could this
be the day? No. It only lasted a
moment for Mel suddenly stepped back in an obvious attempt to put
space between them and
nervously cleared her throat. Before Janice could reply there was
a sharp rap at the door.
Mel smiled sheepishly at Janice and said, "I'll get
that." She then nodded to the tray room service
had brought up and said, "You jes' march yourself over there
and eat something, young lady."
Young lady! Janice Covington could never remember being
called a lady before--young or
otherwise. She made a feeble attempt to curtsy and smiled.
"Yes, ma'am."
By the time Mel returned with the heavy suitcase Janice had
gotten a very good start on the eggs,
bacon, and toast Mel ordered.
"Who brought it?" asked Janice, her mouth full of food.
"Why it was the strangest thing," said Mel. "It
was an army officer, a captain I believe."
"Umm," nodded Janice. "Figures."
"Janice, what would the army be doin' with your
suitcase?"
By now the spell was broken and Janice Covington was all business
again. She poured herself some
coffee and walked over to her suitcase. "The bastards better
not have forgotten anything," she
growled. She placed the suitcase on the bed and, before opening
it, took her cup in both hands and
sipped the coffee with a loud sluuurp!
A woman of impeccable manners herself, this always drove Mel
crazy. "Janice I do declare, do you
have to do that?"
"Do what?" asked Janice, her mind elsewhere. She popped
open the latches on the case and took a
mental inventory of its contents. Of primary concern was the .45
automatic. She halfway expected it
to be missing but there it was--neatly tucked under her
"protection."
Mel watched warily as Janice picked up the .45 and hefted it in
her hand. She released the catch
and pulled out the clip. She then pulled the slide back and
carefully inspected the breech and firing
pin. Government agents or no, when it came to her weapon Janice
Covington trusted nobody.
Satisfied all was in order she picked up the clip and, with the
heel of her hand, bumped it back into
the pistol.
"Golly, Janice, is it really necessary to load that thing
again?" asked Mel.
"Without its little pals it's just a useless hunk of
steel," said Janice matter-of-factly. She tucked the
.45 back into the suitcase and returned to her breakfast. For her
part Mel was dying to know what
this was all about but she knew it would not do any good to press
her friend.
A few minutes later Janice finished off her toast and downed the
last of her coffee. Leaning back and
contentedly patting her stomach, she grinned at her friend and
said, "You're not gonna believe what
I'm about to tell you."
Ten minutes later Mel had to agree. "You're right, I don't
believe you.
"Told ya."
"So when do we leave?" asked Mel excitedly.
Janice took a deep breath and spread her hands on her knees.
"That's what I want to talk to you
about."
Behind her horn-rimmed glasses Mel's eyes narrowed. "What do
you meeaan?" she drawled. Janice
had found that the more excited Mel got, the more pronounced her
drawl became.
"I couldn't tell you over the phone," said Janice,
"but I was told this could be a risky business. A very risky
business."
"What are you sayin'?"
"I'm saying you really ought to give this some thought
before you decide if you want to come or not."
Mel cast her eyes down and, her hurt plainly evident, asked,
"If you didn't want me to go why did
you ask me to come up here?"
"Damn it, Mel, I never said that," replied Janice.
"I'm merely sayin' it could get...rough, ya know?"
"Janice, you know I go where you go, that is unless you
don't...want...me...to."
The apprehension on the woman's face was enough to make the
Janice want to kick herself in the
rear for even bringing it up but she knew the real possibility of
danger was something that had to be
made clear to Mel. Having fulfilled that obligation, she sagged
her shoulders in defeat and shook her
head. "Kid, you know that's not true," she said.
"After all, we're a team remember?"
Mel happily clasped her hands together and giggled like a school
girl. She then got serious and said
quietly, "Janice, I promise won't do nothin' to put us in
danger. I'll do whatever you say."
"Well you'd better," said Janice, smiling weakly. God,
if something happens to her over there I'll
never forgive myself, she thought. She then patted the tall woman
on the knee and said, "You ought
to try to get some rest now. I've got a feelin' it's gonna be a
while before we find a bed this soft
again."
That afternoon Janice received a call from an army colonel
setting in motion a chain of events the
two of them would remember for the rest of their lives.
Corporal Mikkelson stuck out his
arm and grinned at the two women he had shared crossing six
thousand miles of ocean with. "Well, ladies, there it
is."
Mel stood up and groped her way to the waist gunner's door and
looked out at the huge airfield
sprawling below. "Oh, my!" she gasped.
"That's Clark Field," said Mikkelson.
Janice, meanwhile, was content to sit with eyes closed and her
back against the side of the B-17.
She was disgusted to find that, once again, her stomach had
betrayed her. It caused her no end of
grief to know that she was so easily susceptible to motion
sickness, especially airplanes. Once during
a particularly rough flight from Cairo to Damascus in an old Ford
Tri-Motor she had thrown up all
over the co-pilot's neck hence giving new meaning to her
nickname, "Mad Dog." Her flight from
New York to Washington had not really counted because she had
been too hung over to care. Now
she found herself wishing she had something to knock her
out.
The big Flying Fortress banked to the right and slowly began to
make its descent. The plane was the
last of a flight of six to touch down at the big airfield and its
slow taxi to its designated spot on the
field was the culmination of an odyssey for the two women that
had begun three days before and a
half a world away.
After receiving the colonel's call Mel and Janice had crawled
into the back of another C-47 and
flown to Atlanta, Georgia. There they had scrambled into a
waiting Mitchell B-25 and flown to San
Antonio, Texas where they had joined up with the crew of the B-17
they were now on. These
planes were being transferred to the Philippines in light of the
present tensions with the Japanese.
From San Antonio they had flown first to Phoenix and finally to
San Diego.
At each stop the women had been met with disbelief and even some
disdain but each time all Janice
had to do was produce the letter with "War Department,
Office of the Army Chief of Staff," on the
letterhead and the signature "George C. Marshall" at
the bottom and it was as though she were
parting the Red Sea. Instantly these previously dubious men fell
all over themselves to be of
assistance.
In San Diego they had waited six hours in a grimy hangar while
the Superforts underwent routine
maintenance in preparation of the Pacific crossing. At Pearl
Harbor they had waited twelve more
hours while the flight crews got some much needed rest and then
it was on to Wake Island. From
that small speck of dirt (Privately Janice had worried whether
any of these young men's navigation
was good enough to hit the small clump of dirt) they flew to Guam
and finally, their destination at the
airfield northwest of Manila.
Clark Field was the largest American air base in the Far East and
many in Washington referred to it
as MacArthur International Airport. However as Janice swung
herself down out of the pilot's hatch
the imperial general with the giant ego was the last thing on her
mind. "Hey, Bud!" she yelled at a
passing mechanic. "Where's the can?"
Chapter 4
"Hello, my name is Major
Franks," said the short, stocky man as he walked over to
meet Janice.
For the last ten minutes had waited beside his staff car with a
nervous Mel while her friend dropped
a bomb load of her own in the maintenance latrine. He had only
two hours ago received a message
informing him there were two civilians on board the incoming
flight of B-17's. As a liaison officer he
was constantly meeting people coming over from the States, be it
a congressman, or senator, or
defense contractor. Many of these wasters of the taxpayers money
merely wanted to have their
picture taken with the grandiose MacArthur. When he had seen
Janice and Mel emerge from the
plane it had taken some moments to get over the shock that they
were women.
Janice stuck out her hand and said, "Major, my name is
Janice Covington and this is my colleague,
Melinda Pappas."
Major Franks stretched out his arm toward the car and said,
"Ladies, if you will be so kind as to
follow me."
When they reached the car Major Franks gallantly opened the rear
door for the tall, obviously
refined, Mel.
"Why thank you, sir," smiled Mel.
Janice, meanwhile, unceremoniously yanked open the front door and
plopped down in the shotgun
seat. Again momentarily taken aback, the Major shrugged and eased
into the back seat with the
lovely young Southern lady. Fifteen minutes later the three of
them were sitting in the Major's
cramped office in the administration building at the far end of
the field.
The Major offered them refreshments and Mel took a Coke. Janice,
while fervently wishing for a
screwdriver, settled for just the orange juice.
"Now ladies, how can I be of service to you?" asked the
Major.
Janice unbuttoned the flap on her shirt pocket and pulled a page
torn from her notebook. "I've made
a list of things I'm gonna need."
The Major smiled as he picked up the note but his amusement soon
vanished. He put down the note
and looked at Janice as if she were The Bride of Frankenstein.
"You're not serious!" he exclaimed.
Janice killed the last of her juice, set the mess cup down on the
Major's desk, and returned the
Major's steely gaze. "What makes you think I'm not?"
she asked.
The Major pointed at the note and incredulously began to read the
list aloud. "Ten clips for a 1911A
automatic? A Marine combat knife? One pair of medium-sized
fatigue pants?"
"The pants are for her," Janice interrupted, nodding at
Mel.
Franks ignored her and continued, "One pair of binoculars, a
Navy survival kit," he put the note
down, "and last but certainly not least, two hand
grenades."
"Oh Lord, Janice, what are you going to do with those?
"That's a good question," smirked the Major.
"You never know what you'll run into," said Janice.
"Sorry, but your request is out of the question!"
exclaimed Franks. "Lady, there is no way in hell we
are going to issue ordinance to a private citizen. Especially a,
a woman!
It was the way he said woman that really ticked Janice
off. He had sort of spit the word out as if it
were somehow contemptible to him. With her face not changing
expression at all she leaned back in
her chair and straightened out her right leg so she could reach
into her pants pocket. Slowly she dug
her hand in and pulled out her ever present pack of Beeman's
chewing gum.
"Ya want one, Mel?" she asked quietly.
"No thank you," replied Mel meekly. She knew this was
the calm before the storm.
Janice carefully unwrapped the stick, rolled it up and placed it
in her mouth. "First of all," she began,
grinding her teeth to flatten out the stiff gum, "I didn't
ask for this. I was mindin' my own business
when I was rousted out of bed in the middle of the night by some
of your fellow government
employees. After a lovely flight to Washington I was taken to see
a Mister George Marshall and
some other guy. Maybe you've heard of him? Do the initials F-D-R
ring a bell?"
Mel sat watching Janice's neck get a little redder and heard her
voice rise a little higher with each
sentence she uttered. Having been witness to many a volcanic
eruption by her friend, she had
become something of an expert at prognosticating their magnitude.
Oh my, she thought. Batten down
the hatches. It was clear Typhoon Janice was about to hit.
"Anyway, Mister Roosevelt asked my associate and me..."
Mel though it kind of Janice to include
her. "...to do a job for him. Now when the President of the
United States personally asks you to do
something you tend to want to do it, right?" She stood up
and leaned over, placing the palms of her
hands flat on the desk. "Major, the President more or less
told me that if something goes wrong
down there my friend and I are going to be on our fucking own.
Now if that happens I want enough
oomph to at least give us a fucking chance, you understand! It
might mean the difference between
getting the job done or not."
She straightened up and pulled the now well-worn letter from
General Marshall out of her pocket.
She then unfolded it and tossed it down on the Major's desk.
"You see what that says, Franks? I am
to receive full co-operation from all military
personnel. Now how do you think Marshall is gonna
like it if I come back empty-handed and have to explain to him I
was unable to do my job because
some pissy-assed, paper-shuffling nobody in the
Philippines wouldn't play ball? It won't be my ass
they'll be puttin' in the sling.
"Now see here..." Franks tried to fight back but Janice
was on a roll now.
"Just how long do you think it would be before he called
your boss demanding to know why one of
his officers was disobeying orders?"
By now Janice was practically shouting and the major was reduced
to just staring open-mouthed at
the raging archaeologist.
"You know," she sneered, "you'll be lucky if all
they do to you is transfer you to some fucking
weather station in Alaska!"
Franks picked up the letter and looked at it. There was no
denying it. It did say to give Miss
Covington full co-operation, it did say to give her
anything she needed, and it was signed George C.
Marshall, Army Chief of Staff. With all the dignity he could
muster he stood up and put on his
service cap. "Perhaps I was in error, Miss Covington."
"Well we all make mistakes," said Janice. Having
clearly won the victory she did not now wish to
rub it in. There was something about his attitude, though, that
warned her this was not over.
Franks picked up the note and put it in his pocket. "If you
will wait here please I'll see what I can
do."
Mel felt sorry for the major as she watched him exit the room.
She wondered if she would be to
able to hold up as well as he had to one of Janice's rages. To be
sure there were times when she
would bark at Mel but it was always more with a sense of
exasperation or annoyance. Never once
had Janice vented that kind of anger on her.
"Janice?"
"Yeah?"
"Was, was that a number one?" Often after calming down
from a tirade such as this Janice would
jokingly say it was a "number two" or a "number
three" depending on its severity. Mel had never
heard her rate one as a number one. She suspected this might be
the one.
"Nah," replied Janice,
smiling warmly at her friend. "A number one has a lot more
'fucks' in it." She
did take a kind of perverse pleasure in shocking Mel.
Forty-five minutes later Franks returned with an olive green army
pack and unceremoniously
dumped it at Janice's feet. During his absence he had become more
and more angry over Janice's
tirade. How dare that bitch speak to me that way! he raged.
"I want you to know it took some fancy talking to get all
this," the major said coldly. "But everything
you asked for is in there. By the way, are you sure you know how
to use those pineapples?"
"It was one of the many things I learned when I was in Spain
in '36," replied Janice. This guy is
spoiling for a fight, she thought.
Franks sat down at his desk while Janice opened up the pack.
Retrieving the fatigue pants from the
pack, she tossed them to Mel and said, "Go find a can and
put these on." On the flight over Janice
had impishly warned her it would not be wise to wear anything
that would allow the native wildlife
(i.e. insects, spiders, snakes, small rodents) to crawl up her
leg.
Mel silently rose clutching the pants to her chest and looked
inquiringly at the major.
"Turn left down the hall--go all the way to the end,"
he said tersely.
Mel nervously nodded her thanks and left the room.
After she had gone the room was uncomfortably quiet for several
minutes until the major leaned
back in his chair and eyed Janice curiously. "Can I ask you
something?"
"It depends."
"I was just wondering why you would be taking someone like
your friend to a hell-hole like Borneo."
"What do you mean, 'someone like her?'" Janice asked
suspiciously.
"Well I mean she doesn't seem like she belongs out here. How
does she fit in? She is obviously not
as capable as you are." The major then smiled knowingly at
Janice and added, "Or maybe she
serves some other purpose?"
"What the hell are you talkin' about?"
"Aw, come on. I saw how she looks at you. You know, I've
heard of people like you but..." The
major let his words conveniently trail off.
Janice's eyes grew hard and she shot him a withering glare.
"Number one, Melinda Pappas is one of
the foremost experts on ancient languages in the entire country.
Number two, she is a hell of a lot
tougher than you give her credit for. Number three, she is my
best friend and I resent like hell your
thinking her to be anything but the lady she is."
"Lady my ass," snorted the major. "You two are as
queer as four dollar bills. I knew it from the first
minute I laid eyes on you. How the hell you managed to
hornswoggle Marshall into sending you out
here is something that's going to be looked into, I promise you
that!"
At this point Mel re-entered the room and quietly re-occupied her
spot beside Janice.
The old saying, "If looks could kill..." certainly
applied to Janice Covington at this moment. Never in
all her life had she wanted to hurt someone so badly. She stared
at Franks as if trying to bore a hole
through his head through sheer will power alone. How dare
that bastard think of Mel that way!
Down deep she knew there was more than a grain of truth in what
Franks said but he had made it
sound so...dirty.
Franks casually lit his pipe and then continued, "I just got
off the phone with MacArthur's chief of
staff, General Sutherland. There's a navy PBY bound for Australia
leaving from Corregidor
tomorrow morning at 0630 hours. General Sutherland said the
swabbies have agreed to drop you
off on Borneo. He also said that I was to personally see to it
you get on the plane."
"How thoughtful of him," Janice replied caustically.
Taking Mel's skirt from her and stuffing it into the
field pack, she then stood up and slung one strap over her
shoulder. "Is there any place my friend
and I can get something to eat?"
"Sorry," sniffed Franks. "The mess hall doesn't
open until 1600 hours."
"Come on, Mel," said Janice. "Something stinks in
here and it's not the pipe."
Once outside they descended the administration steps and paused
at the bottom.
"Don't worry, Kid," said Janice, "we'll find
something to eat."
"But the major said--"
"The major doesn't know shit from Shinola," growled
Janice. "Besides, at a place like this you can
find anything you want-- if you know where to look. So whaddaya
say we see what we can dig up."
"way-ul I am kinda hungry," Mel admitted.
The two of them began walking away from the administration
building but had not gone far when
Melinda stopped.
"What is it?" Janice asked.
A troubled look came over Mel's face. "Back there in the
major's office. I heard what you said."
"About what?" Janice asked, feigning ignorance.
"About you sayin' I was a lady an' all--"
"Well you are," interrupted Janice.
"And how, and how you said I was your best friend." Mel
looked at the smaller woman earnestly.
"Janice, am I your best friend?"
Janice looked into the lovely face that hinted of hope and not a
little trepidation and with a
tenderness that surprised even her said, "Geez, Mel, don't
ya know that by now?"
Mel's smile was one of both relief
and nervousness and she replied, "I kinda, sorta knew but
darn it
Janice, in all these months you never..."
"Melinda Pappas, anybody that has a friend as true as you
should thank their lucky stars every day. I
know I do."
So there they stood, the tall belle and the petite archaeologist
sharing the warm glow of a love that,
while embryonic for them, predated the founding of Rome and
Carthage, the rise of Buddhism and
Christianity, and most of the Seven Wonders of the Ancient World.
They were totally oblivious to
the roar of the planes circling the field over head and the din
of the multitude of vehicles darting
about all around them
Finally Mel whispered, "Janice, you're my most favorite four
dollar bill in the whole world."
The archaeologist laughed. "So you heard that huh? Well come
on. Even we degenerates have to
eat."
The next morning found the two
women at the pier watching as the launch that was to take them
out
to the PBY eased its way up along side. Janice jerked up the
field pack and slung it over her
shoulder. Turning to Franks she said, "Well, I'd like to say
it's been a pleasure to know you--but it
hasn't."
Like the gracious individual she was, Melinda tried to thank the
major for his assistance but Franks
responded by clenching his teeth and hissing, "I hope you
and your pal here go down there and get
your queer asses sliced up like Christmas turkey."
Mel recoiled in shock at the major's viciousness and blinked in
disbelief. Without taking her burning
eyes off Franks Janice asked Melinda to put their bags in the
launch. She waited until Melinda had
descended the ladder and was out of sight before reacting to the
insult.
The launch was below the pier and its rumbling motor made it
difficult to hear. The major's car and
driver were some distance away and facing in the opposite
direction. It was still early and no one
else was around. Janice Covington saw her chance. She smiled
sweetly at the major and then
promptly kneed him in the groin as hard as she could. The
archaeologist merrily walked over and
mounted the ladder. Just before she disappeared below the pier
she stopped and looked at Franks
now bent over with his knees buckled and groaning like a sick
mule. "They really should replace the
planking on this deck! she yelled. "Somebody could get
hurt!" She mimicked a kiss and dropped
down into the launch.
The ride out to the PBY took some time. The sailors were
surprised but very happy to see two such
fine looking women, especially the striking Mel. For his part the
poor boatswain was very envious of
the sight of his mates gleefully falling all over themselves to
make the women comfortable as he
guided the launch out to the plane. Lucky stiffs, he pouted.
Soon they were gently bumping up against the big Catalina Flying
Boat, USN designation PBY-6.
Janice tossed her pack to the sailor in the blister hatch and
then handed him the rest of their bags.
She took his extended hand and he pulled her into the plane with
a well timed yank. The sailor
pointed to where she was to sit. She nodded her thanks and made
for the designated spot. By now
Mel was being pulled into the plane and the launch was slowly
backing away.
For the three sailors in the boat their short excursion with two
pretty women was a treat they would
repeatedly rub in on their buddies for the next couple of days.
All too soon, however, their happy
recollections of the day would be burned out of their memories by
desperate worries about staying
alive.
In the cockpit the co-pilot of the Catalina meticulously ran down
each item on the pre-flight
checklist. Once satisfied everything was all right the pilot hit
the starter switches and the plane's two
big 1200 horsepower Pratt and Whitney engines coughed and roared
to life. He let the engines idle
for a few minutes to allow the oil temperature to warm up
suffciently and then slowly pulled back on
the throttle. Slowly at first and then faster and faster, the
plane began to lumber across Manila Bay.
In the back the young sailor helped the two women put their
"Mae West" life jackets on and then
took off his white "Dixie cup" hat and stuck in his
pocket. "Hang on, ladies," he said. "These
takeoffs
get kinda bumpy."
At last the plane reached air speed and rose out of the water. It
brushed lightly against the surface
once more as if to kiss it good bye and then slowly pulled itself
into the sky for good.
"Well that wasn't too bad," said the sailor. He nodded
toward the cockpit and added, Lieutenant
Piloto, that's our new pilot, he hasn't been flyin' PBY's very
long but he's getting better." The sailor
stuck his hand out to Janice and said, "My name's Ted
Williams. I'm the radioman."
Janice smiled at him in amusement. "You're kidding,"
she laughed. "Do you get teased much about
your name?"
"All the time, ma'am," replied Williams, shaking his
head sadly. "Especially when I go home."
"Where ya from?"
"The South Bronx."
"Oh Lord!" exclaimed Janice.
"Tell me about it," said Williams.
Totally perplexed by their conversation, Mel leaned over and
whispered in Janice's ear, "What's
wrong with his name?" she asked. "I think it's a nice
name."
Janice looked at her quizzically. "Mel, don't you know who
Ted Williams is?"
"Well uh, I can't rightly say...should I?"
Janice laughed and patted her friend on the knee. "Ted
Williams is a baseball player," she explained.
"A helluva player," the sailor cut in. "I wish the
Yanks had him."
"Oh, I see" said Mel.
"You don't know a thing about baseball, do you?" teased
Janice.
"I do too," Mel huffed, her voice hinting of defiance.
"I know three strikes is an out, an' nine innings
is a game, and I know the world series is always played in New
York."
Janice smiled faintly and decided not to challenge Mel's last
remark and thus ruin her small victory.
Besides, she reasoned, since the Bronx Bombers were in the series
practically every year she wasn't
that far off.
She winked at the grinning sailor and said, "I'm a Yankee
fan too."
"How 'bout you, ma'am," the sailor asked Mel. "You
a Yankee fan too?"
"No self respecting lady from South Carolina would be caught
dead rootin' for a team call the
Yankees," snorted Mel.
"Are you guys ever gonna stop fighting the Civil
War down there?" asked Janice.
"We folk in the South still have vivid memories of what
General Sherman and his marauders did to
Columbia," Mel shot back.
Janice decided not to remind Mel that it was South Carolina that
had started the war in the first
place. She turned to the sailor and asked "So who is your
favorite player, DiMaggio?"
"Nah. 'Course he's their best player and everybody likes
him," said the sailor, "but I kinda like that
rookie shortstop they came up with this year."
"Rizzuto?"
"Yeah. See, he's a little guy like me and we little guys
have to stick together. Who is yours?"
"Henrich," replied Janice. "He never gets the ink
guys like DiMaggio and Dickey and some of the
others do but he goes out there every day and does one a hell of
a job."
"He's tough," the sailor agreed. "I like him
too."
Not wanting to appear completely ignorant about baseball, Melinda
racked her brain trying to come
up with a baseball name. Finally one came to her. "I like Ty
Cobb," she blurted out proudly.
One hundred miles later Janice was still laughing. Mel's fellow
Southerner had not played a baseball
game in thirteen years.
The flight to Borneo went off
without a hitch. Since the plane had to land out in the bay and
there
was no boat there to pick the two women up, Radioman Williams was
forced to pop the cork on a
self-inflating life raft and and, with Janice's aid, paddle them
to shore. Once safely on the beach
Williams quickly helped the women unload their gear.
That done, he stuck his hand out to
Janice and said, "It's sure been was a pleasure to know you,
Janice."
Janice looked into the sailor's face. God! He's so young, she
thought. She sadly remembered what
Roosevelt had told her and wondered whether this boy and maybe
thousands more just like him
would ever live to reach voting age. She took the offered hand
and said, "You take care of yourself,
Kid."
Williams then shook Mel's hand and told her good bye. The women
stood on the dirty beach and
watched him push the raft back into the water and begin paddling
out to the plane. Mel gave the boy
one last wave and turned to Janice. She was about to say
something but was startled by what she
saw. For there, rolling down tough Janice Covington's cheek, was
a single tear.
Go to Part Two of The Favor
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