The Los Alamos mission was over. I stood in the high-altitude sunshine, not enough oxygen in the air, and no protection from the high-altitude beating sun’s rays as I reflected. Somehow, I felt let down. Nothing had happened. It was almost like being a house painter who’s finished with the job, but without any ability to review and appreciate the work or have anyone criticize or compliment it. At least Korea had provided excitement, more in keeping with what little reality I’d gained over the years watching and reading espionage material. Neither John Le Carre nor Ludlum had approached anything dealing with either real situations or real equipment (and the lack of it) or operational moves. When I’d mentioned that to my wife early on, her only reply had bitten deep, but at least she’d delivered it with a laugh; “They write fiction, stupid.”
I drove the modified Mercedes back to Albuquerque, the trip almost all downhill, so I could go as fast as the little former tractor engine powering the heavy car would do. Down the La Bajada Pass part of the freeway, I got it to run at 106 miles per hour before coming down to a more level surface. Kingsley and Nguyen kept the Rover a respectful distance behind but never passed. I knew that neither man would have such a thought cross his mind. The darkest thought occurred to me as I drove, the Becker radio and speakers belting out “Whiter Shade of Pale: “…She said, “There is no reason, and the truth is plain to see, that I wandered through my playing cards, and could not let her be, no one of sixteen vestal virgins who was leaving for the coast…”. The words made no sense, but the mood was right down my alley. What was I going to do in life, or even in the CIA, without those irreplaceable men in my life? Would my life turn a ‘whiter shade of pale?’
It was true, like in the lyrics, that I would be, no doubt, going to the coast, although more likely over it on my way to Hawaii. The tall, elegant, and taciturn man in whatever the reality of the basement of the Los Alamos hospital was had been flatly, analytically, but convincingly revealing. I believed him, although why he said what he’d said I could not understand. The CIA was proving to be a much stranger group to work with than I would ever have believed before working with it.
Without the heavy load the 240D drove with its rear end about six to eight inches higher in the air. For a car that would only get to sixty miles per hour on level ground in over twenty seconds, it looked more like it was something modified to run at a drag strip. That look wasn’t going to work with my wife, not on her car. She and the kids loved the poorly performing thing, and I had to admit that I liked it quite a bit too. It was the only vehicle I would get in and out of, slam the door, and then do it again to listen to the closing bank vault door sound produced.
I drove straight to the Amos guys at the auto body shop to see if I could get the work done quickly, as I wasn’t going to park the Benz in my driveway looking the way it did.
Mary was home when I called to let her know that I was in the clear, coming back, and would be taking the iodine tablets, like Nguyen and Kingsley, for some time to come. I didn’t tell her I was already back in Albuquerque because I had to clear some things up first that I didn’t want to talk to her over a telephone line. That the Agency monitored all our home telephone conversations was bothersome, and always had to be kept in mind when we talked. We needed my job, the house, the cars and the insurance office, and money. So far, no one had ever mentioned anything we talked about, but that didn’t mean they weren’t constantly evaluating everything.
The next call I made was to Herbert.
“What’s going on in Hawaii?” I asked briskly, without saying hello or giving him any end-of-mission report…not that one could truly be given over a non-secure telephone line.
“The Agency acquires, accumulates, and stores information,” he replied, matter-of-factly. “It does not give it out unless action or necessity of another order is called for.”
“Who told you anything about Hawaii?” he then asked.
I repeated the very words he’d used on me back to him, but he didn’t laugh at the absurdity of what either of us had said.
“You need to go to a secure location,” he responded, after a slight delay.
“And where would that be?” I asked, “There’s no embassy or consulate I know of around here.”
“Go to the Agency office,” he shot back, truly surprising me.
“There’s an office in Albuquerque?” My shock in hearing of such a thing or place is evident in my tone.
“Go to Kirtland and enter the National Atomic Museum. The second unmarked door to the right of the main entrance will open when they see you on the hidden camera.”
“The Agency has a regular office in Albuquerque? Why wasn’t I told before? “I asked, shaking my head at the apparent lack of logic, or what seemed apparent to me.
“You keep talking but not saying anything, like there’s a telephone directory stored somewhere. You are smarter than this.”
The receiver went dead in my hand, as I smiled at it ruefully. Herbert was right, of course. There would be no directory, and with some very good reasons. Anyone going to a known Agency office would be noted and then burned as an agent with any forces out in the world that had some sort of need or want to know. Going to a consulate or embassy was a wiser choice when one was nearby and available, but that wasn’t an option when moving around in the States.
The car restoration took only an hour, which the three of us spent at Benningan’s restaurant in the Uptown area of Albuquerque. We went there to wait and drink coffee simply because it was the very first restaurant I’d ever gone to after moving to New Mexico. I loved the layout, the old rock playing in the background, and the hustle and bustle of the business community that frequented it.
I let both of my companions know that as soon as I dropped the Benz at home we’d be going back to the base. I got no questions nor arguments, but then I’d expected none. Truer followers could not be found to replace them which once again caused my thoughts to turn a bit dark.
Mary had been part of the decision to exclude her from accompanying to Los Alamos and I’d made sure to tell her about the modifications to her prized ‘green hornet’ of a German underpowered luxury car. I left her in the driveway, surprised by how intensely she was examining every part of the car that’d been modified.
My official but truly fake Marine Corps officer I.D. card worked, as it always had, to get us through the main gate of the base. The staff sergeant who examined the card seemed squared away and knowledgeable. I asked him how civilians without proper military identification got through the gate to go through the museum. He said that museum civilians got a special short-term pass, and everyone in such a visiting vehicle had to surrender their identification documents.
“The base has Manzano Mountain nuclear warhead storage right off in the distance there,” I said, pointing at the not-so-distant mountain and smiling at the staff sergeant.
“The museum is a quarter mile down this main road,” the staff sergeant replied, without a smile. “You can’t miss it, or should I say, don’t miss it.”
I drove slowly forward, realizing too late that I should have kept my mouth shut. The sergeant’s tone had been vaguely threatening. Most people, military or otherwise, likely were unaware of the nuclear weapons storage facility, and even discussing that had raised suspicion in the Marine’s mind. Once again, I knew I was still making one mistake after another in being what I was going to be expected to be…and training was the only hope I had in helping me to figure out what that was.
The museum was as described in the location. The outside of the building was plated with aluminum or some other fairly shiny metal. The entrance was made up of two double doors of glass and much more glass with windows penetrating the walls for as far as the eye could see. I walked inside, leaving Kingsley and Nguyen to wait with the Range Rover. The second door was as described by Herbert. White in color, like several more that had titles painted on them. I got ready to stand in front of the door, but even with no camera visible, I was noticed immediately, and the door opened in front of me. I walked inside, and the door closed automatically behind my back.
There was no one there. I stood and looked around at the half wall cubicles that businesses used who had a lot of employees working the phones or doing paperwork separately but together. An overhead speaker informed me what to do.
“Take the hall to your left and enter any of the closed doors. You’ll find a telephone in each. The handset you pick up will ring the person of your intent.”
I picked a door at random, opened it, and went inside. The door, once again, closed behind me. A single black old-fashioned Bakelite black phone sat alone atop the only desk. It was a pushbutton, however not with a rotary dial. For some reason, the whole setup made me feel that I was part of a truly secret organization. Everything just clicked into place like a silently running, well-oiled watch. I picked up the receiver but didn’t have to dial. There was a short buzzing sound coming through the earpiece before Herbert’s voice came through.
“Your mission was quite a success,” he began. “Nobody noticed a thing from beginning to end. Congratulations.”
“Except now I glow in the dark,” I replied, although Herbert ignored the joke and went on.
“The iodine won’t hurt you, and we have a bit more to do.”
“Tony Herbert, sir, my control officer, at what point am I going to enter training so I can become really good at doing all this?” I asked, my tone one of near begging. Despite my evident successes so far, I felt incompetent and so very capable of making the most foolish of mistakes.
“Oahu is training,” Herbert said.
“I thought Charm School was in New Jersey, with side trips for explosives, sniping, and other specialty stuff in Utah, Nevada, and California. What training is out in Hawaii, and where on Oahu? I was raised there for God’s sake, and I never heard of any training facility for intelligence agents, and my dad was the harbor master at Pearl.”
“You live in Albuquerque and had no idea there was a CIA office right under your nose,” Herbert shot back. “UDT training command is on Ford Island, there.”
“Ford Island, UDT, like Frogmen, do you have to swim on and off the island?”
“You won’t miss Christmas,” Herbert replied, as if that had anything to do with anything as far as the Agency was concerned.
I was coming to find that the care and keeping of its agents was very much CIA concern but not necessarily the comfort or family of the men and women who worked with or for them. In my days as a real Marine, it had been quite common to hear some talk about the families of the men, even officers’ families. “If we wanted you to have a wife and family we’d have issued you those things,” was a not too uncommon expression.
“I’m not going,” I said, shocking Herbert into silence for almost a minute.
“You’re not going,” he finally replied. “What’s this new wrinkle? You were raised out there, know the culture, the language, and the twists and turns of the strange cultural mix.”
“Okay, I’ll go, but I promised my wife that I would never visit the islands without her at my side. Is that in the budget for this school?”
“That’s a problem,” Herbert replied, his voice almost a whisper. “Sit tight where you are, and I’ll call you back momentarily.”
The phone handset went back to buzzing softly. I hung it up and then pulled out the desk chair to sit and wait. My thoughts were all about temporary additional duties and pay, which would have to be stretched to the max to cover my wife’s air travel and hotel stay, along with the kids.
The phone rang. I picked it up before it could ring twice.
“Well,” I said, before Herbert could say anything. But it wasn’t Herbert on the line.
“This is Robert Clayton Ames, Chief of Field Operations,” the hard, precise, and unemotional voice said.
“Yes, sir,” was all I could think to say. I had a very strong feeling that the chief of any operation, at the upper levels of the Agency, seldom talked to agents in the field, and even less seldom to those who were as yet untrained in field work.
“We have some hard and fast rules you have not learned about yet,” Ames said, waiting a few seconds for his words to sink in before going on. There was no question, so I waited with him.
“We do not allow, under any circumstances, family, friends, civilians, or those not assigned field posts to go on missions,” the disembodied voice stated before only silence could be heard through the handset as I waited for more.
I stared at the wall in front of me, trying to take in what the man was trying to say. I’d just come off a mission where it had been recommended that I take my wife along to shop in Santa Fe to provide deeper cover for that mission. Was Mr. Ames stating something for the record so the Agency would be absolved if some family member or friend was injured do to my work? It made little sense that it would be anything else. The apparent rigid rules of field conduct were, in fact, about as malleable as soft putty.
“The UDT training can’t be counted as being a mission, can it? I asked, before concluding, after a few seconds without a sound from the receiver, that Mr. Ames was gone.
“I’m here,” Herbert said before I could hang up. “I have a marginal solution if you’ll accept it.”
That I might be the one to decide or accept anything, other than to cause my own early resignation, took me by surprise. I waited for him to go on with whatever the ‘marginal solution’ might be.
“Kauai. You wife and daughter can wait for you on the island of Kauai at a place called the Princeville Resort located just above the village of Hanalei. That distance should preclude the invoking of the family and friends rule, and you can tell Mary that its part of your Christmas gift to her.” Herbert stopped talking and waited.
I thought over the offer, but then the whole question of the thing leaped out at me.
“What mission? The UDT training is not a mission. I was thinking the wrong way when I spoke to Mr. Ames. What is the mission, since it’s not the training?”
“Neither I nor the Chief of Operations can tell you that, even over a secure line,” Herbert replied, his voice beginning to show some discomfort.
“Then give me a hint,” I replied, wondering why he hadn’t hung up in his usual abrupt style yet.
Whatever the mission was required that I be properly prepared to handle it, which, with UDT training, meant that it was underwater somewhere off Oahu.
The phone went silent, although I could hear vague conversational comments in the background, but could not make out what was being said. If Herbert was with the Chief of Field Operations personally, at his low level in the field system, then whatever they were talking about was a big deal indeed. Why he’d mentioned lying to Mary about the mission also surprised me. I wouldn’t do that, not if there was any element of risk whatsoever, even with Kauai a bit over a hundred miles across very deep ocean from Oahu.
“Okay,” Herbert said, as if he was more confident in a solution than he’d sounded earlier. “Werner Erhard,” he said, “in what way did he get our full attention?”
I literally held the phone’s receiver away from me as I thought. I reviewed the mission with Werner. There had been that one word reply from him at a very critical moment. That one word had changed everything.
Nuclear, I wanted to whisper in response, but I knew better. Herbert hadn’t been beating around the bush for no reason at all. Nuclear. I was fast becoming a nuclear transport and recovery agent of the United States National Labs, or maybe even for the Atomic Energy Commission. I had no idea, but the fact that Ames had come on the line to talk to me spoke directly to me in ways that Herbert’s could never have done.
I said nothing, rolling everything that had been discussed since the one word in my own life had come at me. I hadn’t spoken it. I’d received it, just like I had Werner’s single word. My father had talked for a bit about the nuclear weapons storage at Pearl Harbor, off in one of the many arms of water that spread out like an octopus from the main harbor. Almost all of those estuaries and mini harbors were unused or had mothballed ships stored in them. The nuclear warheads were on hand to load into submarines for their ASROC systems, for some of their torpedoes, and for the ‘boomer’ ICBM Ohio class subs to re-arm with warheads, should it come to that.
“The artifact,” I said, not knowing why I was saying the word to Herbert.
Somehow, I had become, like the commander of the beach patrol at the Western White House in San Clemente, a small figure but one with potentially major importance. That the only importance, even back in the Ashau Valley of Vietnam, had been fleeting, this time it was traveling with me, although for the life of me, I couldn’t figure out where it would lead, except to the handling of another bit or chunk of nuclear-enriched material.
I knew, without even bringing my wife’s terrifically objective and analytical skills into play, that there was a bomb out there off Oahu. Somehow, it had gotten away and had to be retrieved, and it was underwater. The UDT training for me kept me at the very point, with the well-trained and so experienced Frogmen of great fame, would be working in support of whatever I had to do. I knew I was being afforded an uncommon place among the scientific community. I was being accepted as knowing and understanding the handling of nuclear warheads without having a shred of physics training, following two courses in High School. I also knew that I was accepted as someone who would keep whatever secrets about the mission that had to be lying there on the bottom of the ocean.
“Thank you,” I said when Herbert failed to reply.
I knew he understood without any further conversation, as I did. There was no turning down the mission, although I would talk to my wife about breaking my word about never going to Hawaii without her. I would not leave her behind, but if she was able to read the danger, then I would accept her backing down and letting me go it alone.
“For what?” Herbert asked back.
“For letting me know in your way. I’m in, of course, as I would imagine that a lot of lives might be on the line here and you guys are hopefully better at the selection process than I will likely ever be.”
There seemed to be no point in complaining about anything. I was financially and career orientation trapped, and I knew it.
“What are the arrangements for all this?” I asked.
“Mac will be at the airport with the Starlifter for your immediate transport. Your wife and kids will be provided civilian travel to Kauai tomorrow and a room at the Princeville Resort, as promised, until you can get back and forth to see them. The training is rigorous, even for a swimmer like you, so I make no promises about time being available for social reasons.”
“When’s the plane coming in?” I inquired, as I hadn’t even been home since coming back from Los Alamos.
“In the air, with Mac aboard,” Herbert replied. “I’m sorry, but once again, you’ll be flying without reserves and heading directly in. The UDT course is usually three weeks long, but you’ve got to complete the training in a matter of days.”
“What kind of depth are we talking about?” I asked, as although I wasn’t a SCUBA qualified diver, I knew quite a bit about deep diving and the effects of the bends if following the dive tables for time underwater were not rigidly obeyed.
“They tell me that it’s about a thousand.”
“A thousand what?” I asked, wondering what the man was talking about in terms of diving underwater. Herbert didn’t reply, so I tried another tack.
“No one can dive to a thousand feet unless in a bathysphere or special submarine,” I said.
“Technology has changed, as you will discover,” Herbert replied, before hanging up.
Jim,
Thanks for working hard to get back to the once a week posting of new chapters. With all the spending by the Agency, just for you, it becomes clearer why the federal government budget got so out of whack.
Puzzling as to why the agency seems to think you are the go to guy for anything radioactive.
Anxiously awaiting the next episode.
Regards, Sir.
THE WALTER DUKE. Walt, almost all of the mysteries I’ve presented in my work to date has some resolution, although not all. We are not done with the artifact just yet so hang on. Yes, the government spent a lot on using me and why they used me so heavily back then is, well, a mystery that will have some solution and satisfaction for the readers such as yourself as we move on into the next chapters. Please also understand that many times the attention and importance almost any of us get does not have to be founded in fact. Many, for example, see me as a brilliant young commander of Marines in combat but I have never felt that way nor portrayed myself that way. Thanks for the usual depth and good will…
Semper fi, my great friend
Jim
Each chapter is a mystery in it’s own right. I am so turned around right now about who’s who or what’s going on now.
It is not my intent to confuse you Chuck, hence the publishing of the printed books. I don’t make any money doing that but kind of break even every once and awhile. Amazon says I’m a bestseller by far but that just makes me grin. Like winning and Oscar to discover that nobody wants to hire you and the gold on the statue isn’t even real gold plate.
Thanks for the great my friend up north there.
Semper fi,
Jim
Every chapter ends with me longing to keep reading. I usually have to dive into whatever bit of history you left me with a desire to know more about. I wonder if there is a “charm school” at headquarters or if the journey is the school. My underwater experience consisted of attempting to remain underwater in a stock tank while breathing through a 50 foot garden hose. If there had been a library or the internet available at that time I might have been more successful. Next chapter, you will have to explain this to your wife in a matter of minutes. I hope you get to spend significant time with your family near Hanalei.
John Smith, unless air is forced into one end of that hose then you can’t use it to breathe through it it is of nomral diameter then you can do it but only for about two feet…or you get carbon dioxide you breathed out back, and you can’t survive long breathing that compound. Also, at depth, you begin to have pressure problems the further down you go and soon would not be able to force your lungs against the pressure. There, that’s a bit of UDT stuff right here. Thanks for the good wishes and the great comment.
Semper fi,
Jim
If only Tonys hometown friends really knew what he was doing after his time in the in the Army ! I am just waiting for you to mention someone else that I knew, an “alleged” arms dealer who claimed that he had ties with the Company. He had a legitimate business selling firearms, but the way he obtained some of them was of a dubious nature so to speak and he would tell me and my friends that he had considerable help getting them without all the red tape required by US law
Arms dealers, Chuck…and do they come and go in disguise as other beings and things? They sure as hell do and you seldom get to meet one…but can get the results of their weapons transfers up close and personal real easy. It’s also a very dangerous game because weapons are at the very heart of the transactions. I recall a gun dealer in New Mexico, not a true arms dealer, per se, who sold a gun across the counter. The buyer asked for ammo. The guy got ammo for him. The new gun possessor or owner then loaded it, aimed at the guy behind the counter and shot him dead. I think I met a gew dealers out there but for the life of me cannot name one today.
Thanks for the usual well-experienced and knowledgable comment.
Semper fi, my great friend,
Jim
Secured communication seems to be a very popular requirement even today. The size of that facility at Kirkland seems to indicate a much larger domestic operation for the Agency, but I guess the whole nuclear footprint in NM would call for it.
Oahu brought to mind the large ordinance bunkers on the way to the Koli Koli Pass which is restricted access today! Also that there was stuff that actually kept secret back in the Day!
Homan
Colonel, most people in the USA believe that the CIA can only operate legally abroad, but this is anything but true. The Agency has ‘offices’ all over the country becaue they are totally responsible for counter intelligence, not the FBI or any other alphabet operation. All those other organizations report to the CIA when it comes to counter.
I recall visiting the upper repository of weapons at Koli Koli and how secure it was. Then the one at Pearl and of course the handling site near the sub part of the Navy base.
Semper fi, great friend that you are
Jim
Hoooboy, Jim. This keeps getting better and better. Seriously. Riveting.
This kind of comment, my friend, is uncommon among the comments that so many authors might get. When I read this and others like it I am always blown away by the sincerity and the depth of reading it reveals in such intelligent and experienced readers like yourself . I cannot thank you enough, but I am writing tonight because you make it impossible for me not to!!!
Semper fi, and thanks so very much.
Jim
I just had my 9 year old son read this so he wasn’t staring at his phone watching some random video. he was in to it and wanted to read more. Thank you so much for your memories. They hold ground to younger people too.💕💕💕
What a fascinating compliment Randal. Please tell your son that the author has been informed of his reading and interest and also that if you send me his address then I will send him a book of my short stories which he may enjoy because they were specifically written for a younger audience in mind. The price is merely the compliment…which is worth a lot more than a book.
Semper fi and thanks for that oh so special sharing.
Jim
Again I am left speechless! I want more-and fast! Batman
The Batman speaks and so shall his orders be followed. Half way through the next chapter which is
an interesting one, if I may say so. Thanks Tom for the great compliment in that comment…
Your friend for life,
Semper fi,
Jim
Keep them coming LT !
Half way athrough XXIV Tony and it will be there up on your screen early next week.
Back to my weekly regimen.
Thanks for asking and the support.
Semper fi,
Jim
Sounds like the next chapter will be meaty. Keep ’em coming Jim!
Meaty is a great descriptor Tim and I hope you will not be disappointed. I certainly
was not at the time but credibility can come in to play here because I was involved with so
much that was secret at the time. How can one guy have experienced so much I wonder to this day
and its not even over. A month ago I was back at Los Alamos and not just for research either.
It never quits…thank God.
Semper fi,
Jim
Holy crap!! The plot thickens!! This is getting a little scary, but you evidently handled it, can’t wait to see how this ends!!
Proko, it is a pleasure to read your comment as you are not always here like some. The story ‘rages’ on, so to speak, or write. Yes, one would have thought that the earlier adventures would be the thickest and most action oriented but that did not prove to be true, as you read on and discover more and stranger stuff. Layong there in the telling, like the ooze at the bottom of an ever deeper lagoon…UFOs. And more. The artifact was not the only bizarre and alien thing I was ever to enounter…and there’s still more time left because the people who knew what we knew back them are now rare…and rare is more valuable.
Semper fi, my great loyal and supportive friend,
Jim
Wowser! You are being herded like a steer going to market. But, as you are still alive today, not with the same result. It is a wonder that you don’t glow in the dark.
I’m SCUBA qualified, but generally stayed above 35 feet. I did once dive to 110′, with the British Marines in the Bahamas. It was February in the Bahamas, so we were wearing dry suits. As I was donning the one they gave me, I commented that it was quite chilly – about 45 F. The Marines laughed, then told me they usually did winter drill in the Firth of Forth, Scotland, and pissed in their suits to stay warm.
I started pulling mine off, and asked, “So who has been pissing in mine?”
We had a short laugh and carried on, the mission being to spear grouper for a large party the next day.
In some ways, Jim, I am jealous of your memory, capturing things as though with a recorder or camera. In other ways, glad that I have forgotten details from my past that are best left there.
Enjoyable chapter, well written, and with good foreshadowing of chapters to come.
Happy you got re-settled safely and quickly. But we both grew up in Service families and know how to do it successfully from much practice.
I love the humor Craig. Wet suits you can piss in and gain a very fleeting and small spot of warmth out of,
although later soaking and washing the suit is a bother and I’m not sure the armoa ever really comes out. Usually the lower part of the suit is peed in if the mission is long, like maybe multi-tank or extended rebreather stuff. A dry suit would not add any warmth to the experience as it is indeed a dry suit which works by allowing a layer of air under insulated exeterior to maintain warmth. Liquid of any sort inside a dry suit almost instantly causes that spot in the suit to no longer be an insulator. Thanks for hour own experience. I’m surprised the British Marines used suits at all. Tough as nails those guys, like the SAS.
Loved them when I was with them for a short time.
Semper fi, my great friend,
Jim
“absolved if some family member or friend was injured do to my work?” Should be “due” to my work.
Thanks for the help and the read. Without you and a very few others this publishing online would be a much more
difficult undertaking.
Semper fi,
Jim
member or friend was injured do to my work?
* due to
Thanks for the help Don, much appreciate just how analytically correct you are
and the help you give me for free.
Semper fi,
Jim