Reveal

Even those providing a public good are targets in war.

Gunfire echos through the humid Mid-Atlantic August air, ricocheting off the craggy coastal rocks of Diamond Shoals in the outer banks of North Carolina.


“Fire Again!” I command to the deck-gun crew of U-140, my beautifully sleek U-Boat on its maiden voyage to the U.S. coast. We’ve found and immobilized a 3,000 ton American steamer, and are now working to finish her off. 


Below my feet the hatch to the conning tower comes alive as a head pops out.


“Sir,” Kritzburg calls from the hatch, “We just picked up a wireless transmission from a nearby ship. They are declaring they’ve heard gunfire and ships should avoid this area.”


Ah Hell, we just got here!


“Where is the transmission coming from?” I ask, hoping we can take out two ships before having to scurry away from this location.


“Not more than 4 Kilometers, Sir” Kritzburg replies excitedly.


Thats not far at all. We can hunt them down, then come back to sink this steamer later.


“Find me that ship, we’ll sink them too!” I order to both Kritzburg and the lookouts on deck.


“Hold Fire!” I command to the gun crew. Despite military discipline, their sense of disappointment is obvious.


They want the kill.


“We’ve been detected, and are going to hunt that ship before finishing this one off” I call out, knowing full well my explanation is not completely satisfying to them. 


It should be enough to keep them focused, and that’s all I need right now.


“Sir, the radio transmission states that it’s the lightship!” Kritzburg calls from the hatch.


“Great, lets hunt her down!” I call back.  


Turning from the steamer, I look toward the coastline to where moments ago a double set of light beacons blazed.  They’ve been put out now.


“Full speed, 30 degrees starboard” 


My boat’s engines rev up, churning the water behind us as we head toward Diamond Shoals, and its light ship.


“Be prepared to fire on my notice!” I order the deck-gun crew.  They immediately reload the gun with a renewed vigor.


I got them back.  They’re excited again.


“Get me my speaker.” I order Fuchs, one of the lookouts standing next to me in the warm night air.


That lightship probably has about five to eight men onboard.


“Sir, your speaker.” Fuchs offers, while handing me the megaphone we use to warn ships of their impending destruction.


I wait until we are within a kilometer of the lightship before raising the speaker up to my mouth. In perfect English I bellow “Lightship crew, this is Captain Waldemar Kophamel of Kriegsmarine U-140. Please abandon your ship. You will be sunk.”


As I’m saying this, the searchlight of my ship is centered on the lightship. It’s number, 71 shines brightly in white against the dark hull of the ship.  Huge white letters “Diamond” are written on its side.


“You speak English!” One of the lightship crew calls back.


“Yes, Please confirm you are abandoning your ship.  Do you need a boat?” I reply.


“No, we got one.” The crew-member calls back.


“You have five minutes until we open fire on your ship.”


No vocal reply comes from the lightship, but I can see men scurrying about, preparing the ships launch.


One man enters the launch, while two others carefully lower it into the water.  Then these two, along with two others, descend the ropes to the launch before turning toward my submarine.

I don’t want them on my ship when land is nearby.


Picking up the speaker again, I call out “Please make your way toward land. Do you need any food or water?”


“No thanks!” the curt reply comes back through the heavy air.


“Please get clear of the ship. Safe travels!” I call out after them as they row toward land.


My guys are ready to go.


Get clear of the ship!


They row slowly, but within two minutes are at least 20 meters from the lightship.


“Fire at will!” I order my anxious gun crew.


The deck gun immediately booms, followed by an almost instantaneous explosion below the water line of the lightship.


They fire again. 


The lightship starts listing.


Fire again.


Then again. 


One more time.


That’s enough, it’s going down.


“Hold Fire” I order.


The gun crew halts their actions just as they were about to load the chamber with one more round.


I wonder how long it will take this ship to settle on the bottom.


“1/3 spead, port 90 degrees” I order. “We’re going to finish off that steamer.”


The gun crew cheers.


I’ll let them have their joy.  This has been a good night.
 

 

 

 

 


On the night of August 6, 1918 U-140 chased the American Steamer Merak off of the coast of North Carolina, eventually catching up to it.  The crew of the steamer was taken off of the ship, and the submarine was in the process of sinking it when an astute radio operator on the submarine picked up the Diamond Shoals Lightship radio transmission warning ships to stay out of the area because a U-Boat was operating nearby.  Captain Waldemar Kophamel of U-140 ordered the submarine to find the source of the transmission. When they found out it was the lightship they headed toward it.  The lightship was not built for speed, so its crew knew they could not escape the submarine. The crew of the lightship was allowed to abandon the vessel before it was sunk by the submarine.  This was the U.S. Coast Guard’s only loss due to enemy action in World War I. The wreck of the lightship is still owned by the Coast Guard, and under agreement with National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, divers are documenting the wreck's physical remains. The plan is to nominate the site to the National Register of Historic Places, and to share with the community the story of the lightship for the 100th anniversary of its sinking in 2018.

The 1st Time

Still wet from the rainstorms through which we passed the night, the deck of the carrier undulates with the steep rise and fall of the churning Pacific Ocean.

I taxi my fighter across the deck toward the bow of the ship, taking my station facing the wind for maximum lift.

We’re going to take out the fleet!

When my turn arrives I max my engine while holding the breaks to await the next rise of the carrier’s deck with a steep wave.

This is it!

The deck rises.

The flag man drops his arms toward the sea.

Purring like a highly coiled cat ready to pounce, my engine’s full-throttle push against the breaks is relieved as I release the wheels.

Slowly, at first, then with great speed and power, I launch off the deck of the carrier into open ocean.

As I rise I can see our small destroyer escort and massive carriers fade in the distance.

They will never know what hit them!

Our flight of fighters and dive bombers heads toward Oahu, toward Pearl Harbor, towards destiny.

We are the vanguard of a new age!

We are going to catch them with their pants down!

As we approach Pearl Harbor from the north, a vast row of battleships reveals itself from behind the small chain of mountains separating the northern and southern parts of the island.

Scanning away from the battleships, I spot my targets, the orderly lined up planes on Hickam Field and Ford Island.

We did it, they are surprised!

I head my fighter toward Hickam, firing my machine guns to strafe the empty and idle fighters lined up there.

First flight heads toward battleship row, dropping their bombs on each of the ships parked in a beautiful line on the side of Ford Island.

There’s nothing to stop us from taking out the whole fleet and air arm.

What a day, the Pacific is ours!

Zeroing in on Ford Island, I run another pass to strafe even more fighters.

We’re going to take them all out!

No resistance, no idea we were coming, no defense!

As I run low on ammunition I signal to Second Flight, “Time to head home!”

We’ve done our job this day.

 

 

December 7th, 1941 was not the first time anyone conducted a successful aerial assault on U.S. forces based in Pearl Harbor, Hawaii. In fact, on Sunday February 7, 1932 a small force of two aircraft carriers and its destroyer escorts wiped out the United States fleet and all military air assets at Pearl Harbor in a war game designated “Fleet Problem #13”. 152 Fighters and dive bombers launched from a hidden carrier force, which had arrived off the coast of Oahu earlier that morning after hiding in a rain storm, dropped sandbags and flairs, figuratively sinking the ships at anchor in the harbor while also attacking the nearby aircraft. Initially deemed a win for the attacking force, the judges later rescinded the award because of complaints from the Navy the attack was unfair. Sunday was deemed an inappropriate day to attack the fleet at anchor. Rear Admiral Harry Yarnell, the qualified naval aviator who had led the attack force to such success, disagreed with the final ruling, claiming such an attack was exactly what a future enemy could do. The event was observed by those on Hawaii, including representatives of foreign consulates. It was also discussed in local reporting. Nine years later, the Japanese empire conducted the same attack, costing the United States many ships, thousands of men, and bringing the U.S. into the World War. Sometimes, what we may think is unfair is exactly what our opponent believes is needed.

Honor Thy Love

Honor Thy Love

Even the surely painful, vice-like grip of my right hand attempting to hold on to Camille’s delicate, yet unusually sweaty, left, is not enough to keep her within my grasp. The celebratory crowd lurches us in diverging directions through unrelenting waves down the cobblestone central avenue of Marseilles.

“Hold on to me!” Camille screams out.

“I’ll never let you go!” I call back, unable to catch her hand before it slips beyond my reach.

I claw across the tall slender, and until a moment ago, smiling and cheering, man whom the crowd wedged between our newlywed hands.

“You hit me!” he bellows, not really knowing who hit him, just that he was hit.

Ducking under his arm as he begins to swing wildly, I catch Camille’s small left hand with my right and twirl her toward me.

Her right arm swings lovingly over my shoulder and clasps at my neck.

“I’m never leaving your side!” she exclaims, with a deep thrust of warm breath, instantly raising my body temperature.

My left hand slips easily around Camille’s waist. “I love you!”

“I love you too!”

Her smooth lips thrust against my own, as we stand united like a rock, holding firm despite the flood of humanity celebrating a glorious future about to unfold with the start of this righteous war.

~~~

For weeks now, we’ve been mesmerized by the potential for war against Germany, for the chance our generation must make its mark on history and for the honor to fight on behalf of our beloved France. What a great time to be young, fit, in love, and planning a wedding! Every day over the past few weeks, before heading out for the final preparations at the church or with our families, Camille and I sit together in the park, reading the newspaper as we hold each other. The intrigues of the Serbians, the hard line of the Austrians, the uncompromising Russians, the incomprehensible Germans, and the resolute French strain international relations, as if all muscles are coiled in preparations to let slip every war-enabling resource at each other’s throats.

The warm summer days pass with ebbs and flows of the chance this war will come as our wedding day approaches. On some days, the chance of encountering war seems inescapable. On others, diplomacy appears to be making dastardly progress toward some settled solution. Lately, though, the path toward general war, not tread since the age of Napoleon, seems to be finally taking shape.

As Camille and I draw closer to each other, the world draws closer to a definitive end to all of this pathetic uncertainty. We will settle all accounts, once and for all. Germany and Austria-Hungary will be crushed under the sheer weight of the nations arrayed against them. The world will finally have resolution, and I will be married to the most beautiful woman in that world.

What a glorious time to be alive and in love!

~~~

A post came for me this morning. Camille rushed in, holding the small card with my name on it.

She cannot contain her giddiness. “We’ve been mobilized!”

I look at her for a moment, contemplating what she means before it sinks in. I have been mobilized for war, and she is coming with me.

She twirls the card in the air as her body gingerly spins in a very small circle. The soft curves of her hips catch the thin fabric of her white dress, wrapping the garment about her. She flings the card to the sky before rounding about to fall into my arms.

“I will not leave your side,” she repeats in a resolute voice.

“I will not let you,” I repeatedly reply as we make our way to the floor of our humble apartment.

To serve France is the chance of a lifetime for both of us.

~~~

My unit is forming just north of the city in a small park near the north train station. Camille packs us a lunch, expecting that we will have to wait through the afternoon in the park. We walk hand-in-hand to the park, in no hurry to get there before lunch.

“You’re late!” a soft-blue-coated and red-trouser-panted soldier yells when Camille and I stroll into the park together.

He could not even know who I am, so how does he know I’m late.

The soldier grabs my right arm, pulling me away from Camille, and pushing me toward a group of men gathered under a set of willow trees.

“I’m going with him,” Camille demands, following me toward the group of men.

I take her hand in mine again.

The soldier looks at me, laughs, and then snarks out, “No skin off my back, deary. I just hope you don’t mind laying on yours.”

Camille is popular within our unit. She always stays by my side while helping the men clean uniforms, polish buttons, and cook our food. She integrates well with the unit from the start, for the men love having her around. So far, we’ve only had a little bit of trouble with a few guys touching her in ways a married woman should not be touched.

Over the course of the first week, as a unit, the men gather spare scraps of uniforms Camille sews, creating her own uniform. Her beautiful figure is now hidden under soft-blue wool. This creation makes her look less like a woman to all the other men, but nothing will make her less of a woman to me.

~~~

Our orders come this morning to prepare to deploy to the Front. Finally! We have been waiting for several weeks, training, marching, cleaning, marching, eating, and marching every day. What were they waiting for?

The whole unit heads to the train station together. When we arrive, our company of men is connected to the rest of the battalion. Our Battalion Commander, Major Renpis, is at the station. We are lined up, each man and Camille, carrying our weapons and packs. The battalion commander walks the line, cursorily inspecting the companies under his command. Approaching Camille, he does a double take.

She is holding a rifle, just like every man in the unit, but her uniform is not regulation. He pauses in front of her before turning to our Company Commander, Captain Bunoit.

“Captain, this is a woman.”

Captain Bunoit matter-of-factly replies, “Yes, she is the newlywed wife of Private Meripot standing next to her.”

Major Renpis looks her up and down. “You have done well to disguise yourself, Madame.”

Camille smiles, “Thank you, Sir.”

“Of course, you realize that this unit is going to war.”

“Yes, Sir.”

“You will not stay behind?”

“No, Sir, I cannot leave my husband’s side.”

“Private Meripot,” the Major turns toward me, “your wife is your responsibility. I will not acknowledge her existence or take any responsibility for her safety. Do you understand?”

“Yes, Sir.”

“Very well,” he says, turning back toward Camille. “Madame, before exiting the train you should put a blanket around your stomach to make it stick out more and put some dirt on your chin to make it fuller. Then you may be able to pass for a man. I wish you luck, Madame.”

The Major walks on.

~~~

When we exit the train, the Battalion is lined up together with the other Battalions in our division. Our Division Commander addresses the unit.

“We are taking the fight to the enemy,” General Chimeis tells us

“Our triumph will be the Hun’s tragedy. Divisions all over France are preparing for this counter-attack. The Hun almost captured Paris. Now it is our turn to drive like a dagger through their line, all the way to Berlin.

“You men are the pride of France and the nightmare of the enemy. Make your wives, mothers, and children proud. Make them call out with honor: ‘my husband, son, father destroyed Germany.’ Make them thank the heavens you are France!”

The whole unit roars with a massive, “Hurrah! Hurrah!”

Camille, standing at attention by my side, simply brushes her hip to mine. Out of the corner of my eye, I see an almost imperceptible smile at the left edge of her mouth.

~~~

Our division marches toward the Front. The blanket wrapped around her stomach flattens out her upper body, while the dirt hides her small cheekbones and slender chin. As we approach the Front, we can hear the booming of artillery. The closer we get the more we can pick up the metallic tube sound of the field guns firing and the rrraaattaaa-rrraaaataaa of the machineguns. Camille stays by my side the entire march.

We begin to pass a field hospital, where an officer is just coming out of a wounded ward. He carelessly looks up in my general direction. I think nothing of it.

Camille happens to be looking in his direction as he exits the ward, so their eyes meet. He pauses a moment before running toward us.

“Stop! Stop there!” he calls out as he nears our marching line.

We all march on, not knowing whom he is addressing.

“I said stop right there! All of you!”

Captain Bunoit orders out, “Halt!”

The unit comes to a standstill.

The officer, whom I can now see is a Colonel, runs straight toward Camille, passing Captain Bunoit without a glance.

As he nears her, he reaches out his hand, which lands with a less than gentle thud upon Camille’s young, fleshy chest.

“You do not belong here!” he exclaims.

Captain Bunoit is directly behind the Colonel, having followed him over once he realized what the Colonel intended.

“I will not leave my husband’s side,” Camille declares, staring down the Colonel.

“Who is your husband?” the Colonel quips back without looking directly at her.

“I am!” I announce with an attempt at an authoritative voice which pales in comparison to what I had hoped would come out.

“Control your woman, boy. She cannot go to the Front.”

Captain Bunoit, at this point standing directly behind the Colonel, interrupts. “Sir, she is a member of the unit.”

Spinning around, as if seeing Captain Bunoit for the first time, the Colonel barks back “The only option she has is to stay here and serve the whole Army. Is this her role for your unit?”

Blushing, the Captain is at a loss for words.

The Colonel, feeling superior, turns to me again. “Is your woman your unit’s whore?”

Without a thought in my mind, my clenched left fist hurtles toward the Colonel’s face and hits his cheek with a thud.

“She is my wife!” I thunder.

The Colonel stammers, bumps against Captain Bunoit, whose face is covered in disbelief followed by horror.

“Oh, Henri!” Camille calls out. “No!”

By now, the whole unit surrounds our little scene, with other soldiers gathering along the edges. The Colonel's staff rushes toward him, pushing soldiers out of the way to attend his side.

Pulling his hand away from his cheek, the Colonel calls out, “Arrest this whore and soldier at once.”

“Sir, all we want to do is fight for France!” I declare, realizing I may not get that chance after having struck an officer.

“Boy, you have a choice.” The Colonel offers in a fact-laden voice. “You can face the firing squad for striking a superior officer, or you can go to the Front. Which will it be?”

“The Front, Sir!” No thought needed on my part to make that choice.

“Fine, but she cannot go. She must stay here,” the Colonel, replies.

“I will not!” Camille declares. “I will not leave his side.”

Without even looking at Camille, the Colonel, staring deadpan into my eyes, orders, “If you cannot convince her to stay, either you die by firing squad, or she dies before you go to the Front.”

Camille and I look in each other’s eyes. She is willing to give everything for France, but our love is so strong, she cannot leave me.

Softly, so no one else can hear, she whispers to me, “We are dead already.”

As she does so, she reaches down toward my belt and unholsters my Lebel revolver.

I flinch away as she brings the firearm to her forehead.

She leans in to give me a kiss.

I put my left hand on her right hand as we bring our lips together.

The barrel of the firearms is against her temple.

My forefinger finds hers.

We pull together.

~~~

Our march to the Front takes three hours even though we only cover less than a mile. Nine times, we are forced to take cover from German artillery.

The whole unit is quiet the entire way, no words, from any of the men. Even Captain Bunoit is unusually silent.

As we enter the trench, we are told to stand ready.

There is no time to put down our kit, no time to make ourselves at home. We have been ordered to attack right away.

Every man in the unit is thankful, me most of all. May we fight for France! May we make this sacrifice worth the reward.

We are told to drop all of our kit except our rifles, helmets, and ammunition.

“Everything will be moved up for you after you’ve taken their line.”

We all crouch up against the dirt side of the trench. Helmets are tightened, ammunition cartridges filled, and canteens topped off.

My unit gives me the place of honor at the top of a small ladder. I will be the first over the top.

Whistles blow along the entire trench line. Shrill screams of cork-blocked air rushing past uncompromising metal tell the whole French Army to attack.

I leap from the ladder over the rampart of the trench just as the German machine guns open across the entire Front.

cracckk, CCrRAACCKKK, CRRRRAAAACCCCKKKKK three rounds whiz ever closer to my head, until . . .

Camille approaches me in a smooth excitement. She is clean, beautiful, and now in my arms.

Her whisper catches my ear, “We died for France!”

“Yes, yes we did.” I softly reply as our lips meet.

*****

 


Celebration in Paris at the start of World War I.

https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Paris,_Jardin_de_Jenny,_rue_de_Bazeilles,_1914.jpg

 

In early 1915, as the Front-Line in France stabilized, a new unit was approaching the combat zone. One of the soldiers in this unit was accompanied by his wife, who would not leave his side. The soldier was given the choice of leaving the Army in disgrace without having the chance to fight for France or killing his wife. He chose to shoot his wife rather than miss the chance to fight.

French military rules required civilians to stay away from the Front, especially wives, for they were distracting to the soldiers. Prostitutes, however, could ply their trade at the Front. Some wives, later in the year and then through the rest of the war, sacrificed their bodies to the Army of France to stay near their husbands. Most of those husbands never lived to see their wives again.