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He looked at Galloway coldly and walked away. When Galloway looked down at Schneider again, his eyes were closed.
Galloway walked after the doctor.
"Got a minute, Doctor?" The little man turned and again looked coldly at Galloway.
"Certainly I have a minute. Obviously there is very little for me to do around here. What's on your mind?"
"Lieutenant Ward, over there," Galloway said, jerking his thumb toward Ward, "doesn't think he really has to be evacuated."
"What are you, his priest or something?"
"I told him I would ask, Commander," Galloway replied.
"OK. He has broken ribs. He can't fly with broken ribs, OK?
His nose is broken, OK? And there is a good chance he has some bone damage in that area. We won't know until we can get a good ENandT guy to take a good look at him, OK? In addition to that, he has a number of small penetrating wounds, each of which, in this fucking filthy humid environment, is likely to get infected, OK? So I made a decision, Chaplain: Either I let this guy hang around here, and not only get sicker, OK? And take up bed space I'm going to need soon, OK? And eat rations, which we don't have enough of as it is, OK? Or I could evacuate him, OK? I decided to evacuate him. OK?"
"OK," Galloway said. "Sorry to bother you."
"I don't know how long you've been around here, Chaplain," the doctor said. "But you better understand that these pilots are all crazy. For example, I just got word that a lunatic in the hospital on Espiritu Santo went AWOL to come back here. The son of a bitch was suffering from exposure and dehydration after he got shot down and floated around in the goddamned ocean for eighteen hours."
"You don't say?"
"Anything else on your mind, Chaplain?"
"No, thank you very much, Doctor." The doctor turned and walked away. Galloway went back to Jim Ward.
"What did he say, Skipper?"
"He said get on the airplane, Mr. Ward. He said unless you do, your wang will turn black and fall off."
"Come on, I can fly."
"Have a good time in Australia, Jim," Galloway said.
"Oh, shit!" Jim Ward said, resigned to his fate.
When Lieutenant Colonel Clyde W. Dawkins, USMC, wearing a sweat-soaked tropical areas flight suit and a.45 automatic in a shoulder holster, raised his eyes from his desk, he saw Captain Charles M. Galloway, USMCR, standing at the entrance to his tent. Though Dawkins looked hot and hassled, his voice was conversational, even cordial, when he spoke:
"Please come in and have a seat, Captain Galloway, I'll be with you in just a moment."
"Thank you, Sir," Galloway said.
Galloway was worried. He had served under Dawkins for a long time, and he knew Dawkins: When he was really pissed, he really lowered the boom, he assumed the manner of a friendly uncle.
A full two minutes later, Dawkins looked at him.
"I must confess a certain degree of surprise, Captain Galloway. From the description of your physical condition and mental attitude furnished by the medics on Espiritu Santo, I expected a pathetic physical wreck, eyes blazing with a maniacal conviction that the entire war will be lost unless he is there to fight it himself."
"Sir, I'm all right. All I was doing was sitting around reading three-month-old copies of the Saturday Evening Post. "
"In case this has not yet come to your attention, Captain, the Naval Service, in its wisdom, has certain designated specialists, called doctors, who determine if people are fit, or not fit, to return to duty. What makes you think your judgment is superior to theirs?" Galloway opened his mouth to reply, but Dawkins went on before he could. "How the hell did you get back here, anyway?"
"I caught a ride, Sir."
"And did you really think you could get away with just getting on a plane and coming back here?" Galloway made no reply.
"They want you court-martialed for breaking into some supply room. What the hell is that all about? What did you steal, anyway?" Galloway waved his hand, indicating his uniform.
"They wouldn't give me my uniform back, Sir." Dawkins glowered at him for a full thirty seconds, and then said, "If I wasn't so glad to see you, you sonofabitch, I'd personally kick your ass all over this airfield, and then send you back there in irons."
"I thought I should be here, Sir," Galloway said.
"Are you really all right, Charley?"
"I looked like a corpse when they fished me out of the water, and I never want to get that thirsty again, but yes Sir, I'm all right."
"What do you mean, you looked like a corpse?"
"My skin was all puckered up."
"You realize how lucky you were?"
"Yes, Sir."
"Jiggs and Hawthorne weren't lucky," Dawkins said.
"Yes, Sir, Oblensky told me."
"And you know about Ward and Schneider?"
"Yes, Sir. I just saw them. Ward's unhappy about being evacuated."
"Well, following the sterling example of his squadron commander, he'll probably go AWOL and come right back."
"I didn't have the chance to ask Big Steve about aircraft," Galloway said, hoping to change the subject.
"You have eight left. Christ only knows when we'll get more.
I think the Air Corps is down to about six of their P-400s. Have you seen Dunn?"
"No, Sir. I came right here."
"He is now officially an ace. I put him in for a DSC," a Distinguished Service Cross. "They bumped it down to a DFC," a Distinguished Flying Cross.
"You should have known they would," Galloway said.