Authors: John J. Gobbell
22
 Â
21
 Â
20
 Â
19
 Â
18
 Â
17
 Â
16
 Â
15
 Â
14
               Â
9
 Â
8
 Â
7
 Â
6
 Â
5
 Â
4
 Â
3
 Â
2
 Â
1
First printing
Book design: David Alcorn, Alcorn Publication Design
Maps created by Philip Schwartzberg, Meridian Mapping, Minneapolis.
Dedicated to the men and women who served in the American and Allied forces during the long, and sometimes bloody, Cold War. Your contribution may have not been immediately apparent, but you did indeed prevail. Because of you, the world is a much better place. Well done
.
Contents
There's no doubt that people are the essence of it all: our friends, our relatives, our spouses and children, our bosses, teachers, coworkers, healthcare providers, casual acquaintances, even those we don't count among our friends. They drive the engine that allows us to exercise our talents and, eventually, accomplish a goal or twoâmaybe even more if the good Lord is with us. I am no exception. I constantly turn to these people whether or not I'm in trouble. Their comfort and talents sustain me. Over the years they have contributed to my works in more ways than they will ever know. Among them, in no significant order are the following.
The flying scenes were greatly enhanced by Capt. Daniel Truax, USN (Ret.), and my old friend and corsair jockey Dick Bertea, formerly a pilot for the U.S. Marine Corps. Commentary about U.S. Navy organization, tactics, and equipment came from “tin can sailor” Rear Adm. David Ramsey, USN (Ret.). Another old friend, submariner, and fellow author, Cdr. George A. Wallace, USN (Ret.), provided kind advice as well. Yet another friend and contributor is fellow tin can sailor Terry Miller, executive director and editor of the National Association of Destroyer Veterans. A wonderful friend, yachtsman, naval aviator, and patriot, Capt. Randall J. Lynch, commanding officer of the NROTC unit at Embry Riddle Aeronautical University, helped with naval customs and usage.
When medical problems were involved, I once more turned to Dr. Russell Striff and Fred Meister, PhD. Elsewhere I received fine counsel from Bob Bailey, Robert G. Mahan, and Beverly Hills Police Chief David L. Snowden. My hat is off once again to Susan Kechekian of USC's Department of Slavic Studies for her invaluable help with Russian translations not only here but also in the second novel of the Todd Ingram series,
A Code for Tomorrow
.
Most of all, thanks to Rick Russell, director of the Naval Institute Press, whose kind commentary, suggestions, and editing provided the true engine for this work.
As always, my wife, Janine, is not only a great editor (something I relearn every time I go through this) but also a marvelous and loving partner. None of thisâand all of the wonderful events in my lifeâwould have occurred without her.
Also, to you, my readers thank you, and thank you, and thank you for your support, encouragement, critique, and e-mails over the years. Truly, it is you who keep me going. Please visit my website,
www.JohnJGobbell.com
, for commentary on my novels including photos of the actual people, places, and military equipment portrayed herein. Many of the characters in this novel appear in the previous four Todd Ingram novels. As always, mistakes herein are mine alone, many times called to my attention by your kind e-mails. Please keep it up.
JJG
February 2014
Newport Beach, California
Note:
Karafuto Island and Toro Airfield became Sakhalin Oblast and Shakhtyorsk Airfield, respectively, after the Soviets captured them in AugustâSeptember 1945.
U.S. Navy
USS
Maxwell
(DD 525) (Crackerjack), attached to DESRON 77
      Â
Cdr. Alton C. (Todd) Ingram, commanding officer
      Â
Lt. Cdr. Eldon P. (Tubby) White, executive officer
      Â
Lt. Thomas F. (Woody) Woodruff, operations officer
      Â
Lt. Julian Falco, gunnery officer, main battery director
DESRON 77
Maxwell
(flag); DesDiv 77.1,
Maxwell
(flag),
Shaler, Bertea
, and
Geiler;
DesDiv 77.2,
Wallace
(flag),
Cheffer, Beaulieu
, and
Truax
      Â
Capt. Jeremiah T. (Boom Boom) Landa, commodore, Destroyer Squadron 77
Eleventh Naval District, Long Beach, California
      Â
Cdr. Oliver P. (Ollie) Toliver III, case officer, Office of Naval Intelligence (ONI)
      Â
Cdr. Walter (Walt) Hodges, supply officer, Long Beach Naval Station
Other U.S. Navy Personnel
      Â
Adm. William F. Halsey Jr., commander, Third Fleet
      Â
Vice Adm. John S. McCain Sr., commander, Task Force 38 under Admiral Halsey
      Â
Lt. Larry M. O'Toole, attached as Japanese-language interpreter to Manila peace talks and first Karafuto expedition
U.S. Army
SCAP Staff, Manila and Tokyo
      Â
Gen. Douglas A. MacArthur, supreme commander of the Allied Powers (SCAP)
      Â
Gen. Richard K. Sutherland, General MacArthur's chief of staff
      Â
Brig. Gen. Otis (n) DeWitt, aide to General Sutherland
      Â
Col. Sydney Mashbir, Japanese-language expert and chief negotiator, Manila
      Â
Maj. Clive W. Neidemeier, State Department liaison, Ie Shima Air Base/Atsugi Air Base
Karafuto (Sakhalin) Expeditions
      Â
First expedition: USAAF C-54, tail number 626384 (Hot Rod 384)
      Â
Second expedition: USAAF C-54 744326 (Apprentice 26)
      Â
Maj. Marvin F. (Bucky) Radcliff, pilot and aircraft commander, first expedition
      Â
1st Lt. Leroy Telford K. Peoples, copilot, first expedition; pilot and aircraft commander, second expedition
      Â
Capt. Jonathan L. (Jon) Berne, navigator, first and second expeditions
      Â
2nd Lt. Richard W. Lassiter, copilot, second expedition
      Â
Sgt. Leonard (n) Hammer, flight sergeant, engineer, first and second expeditions
      Â
GySgt. Ulysses Gaylord (Ugly) Harper, USMC, squad leader of thirteen Marines, first expedition
      Â
GySgt. Horace T. Boland, USMC, squad leader of thirteen Marines, second expedition
      Â
Colin Blinde, agent, Office of Strategic Services (OSS)
San Pedro, California
      Â
Maj. Helen Durand Ingram, U.S. Army, Todd Ingram's wife; floor nurse, Ward 6, Fort MacArthur Infirmary
      Â
Emma Peabody, Todd and Helen Ingram's next-door neighbor on South Alma Street
      Â
Maj. Julian T. Raduga, MD, U.S. Army, psychiatrist, Fort MacArthur Infirmary
      Â
Cpl. Eddie Bergen, patient, Ward 6, Fort MacArthur Infirmary; previously U.S. Army M-4 tanker on Okinawa
Hollywood, California
      Â
Laura West, pianist, NBC Symphony Orchestra, West Coast Division
      Â
Maestro Arturo Toscanini, conductor, NBC Symphony Orchestra, West Coast Division
      Â
Roberta Thatcher, business manager, NBC Symphony Orchestra
      Â
Anoushka Dezhnev, Russian film star; mother of Eduard Dezhnev
Soviets
USSR Navy
      Â
Captain Third Rank Eduard Ianovich Dezhnev, garrison commander, 21st Naval Regiment, Shakhtyorsk Airfield, Sakhalin Island
      Â
Captain First Rank Gennady Kulibin, Dezhnev's immediate superior at Shakhtyorsk Airfield, Sakhalin; later, commanding officer of the cruiser
Admiral Volshkov
NKVD (Narodnyi Kommissariat Vnutrennikh del), Soviet Secret Service, predecessor of the MGB and KGB
      Â
Karol Dudek, Polish assassin
      Â
Oleg Lepechn, agent, Shakhtyorsk Airfield, Sakhalin
      Â
Matvie Borzakov, agent, Shakhtyorsk Airfield, Sakhalin
Imperial Japanese Navy (IJN)
      Â
Captain Shiroku Fujimoto, commander minefields of Tokyo Bay and environs
      Â
Major Kotoku Fujimoto, commander Toro Airfield, Karafuto (Sakhalin), Imperial Japanese Marines
International Red Cross
      Â
Walter Frederick Boring, Geneva, Switzerland; representative assigned to the northeast Asia sector