“Torpedoes in the water! Off the port side.”
Yamamoto did not react. This was not his battleship to command. So he very deliberately raised his cup and slowly drank the rest of the tea, without even looking out the window, like so many others who were searching for the telltale streak just beneath the ocean’s surface. Captain Takayanagi would see them through this, or not. Yamamoto concentrated on drawing a slow, deep breath and focusing on the center of his being, his
In spite of his outwardly unmoved appearance, however, the cry of
No, this would be an American submarine, firing torpedoes that hardly ever worked, assuming the U.S. Navy had not yet to come to its senses. Yamamoto didn’t know why it was taking the Americans so long to fix their torpedoes, now that they must surely know of their defects. Perhaps they weren’t listening quite so closely to Kolhammer as he would have, in their position.
The grand admiral tilted his head in a figurative gesture of peering into the sky, where he knew that robot planes were watching everything. He finished the tea, while around him sailors and their superiors shouted orders and acknowledgment back and forth as Takayanagi attempted to move the
“Look!” someone shouted, and a strangled cheer arose, then quickly died as a little destroyer raced across the torpedoes’ track. There were two explosions, and twin geysers of white water bracketed her, at stem and stern. The
Four other destroyers raced toward their crippled sister ship, popping depth charges as they sliced through the waves and sea spray.
Yamamoto sent a silent prayer of thanks to the ancestors of the men who had just perished on the little ship that had sacrificed herself in his behalf.
No, he thought, nothing was certain but death.
33
OAHU, HAWAII
A lone Wildcat had appeared out of nowhere and strafed Corporal Yutaka Nanten’s landing barge, turning it into a slaughtering pen. Cannon and machine-gun fire killed three quarters of his platoon, the first pass by the fighter scything them down, another pass pulverizing their remains into a scarlet gravy while Nanten screamed and screamed.
Three Zeros came and drove the demon away, but by then it was too late. Even the helmsman was dead; all that was left was one disembodied hand, still clutching at the steering wheel. Nanten himself was unharmed, except for a small sliver of bone that had pierced his left cheek. With tremors shaking his entire body, he pulled it out like a splinter, expecting half his face to come away. But the bone fragment wasn’t even his.
As reason began to reassert itself, he realized he was not completely alone. Not everyone had been killed. He could hear three other men moaning or screaming over the sounds of the engine and the thump of the hull on the waves, as the helmsman’s hand steered them ever farther from the other boats.
Nanten’s limbs shook so much that he couldn’t manage to drag himself up out of the bloody gruel that was sloshing up and down the length of the barge as they plunged through the swell.
The night before, as they had waited to transfer from the troopship, there had been a great deal of nervous talk concerning the time travelers they might encounter, and what weapons they might wield. Many of their greatest fears seemed to be centered on the lost souls of the
Nanten himself felt madness gnawing at the edge of his mind.
Who needed chaos blades and lost souls, when a simple aeroplane could do this?
He wiped the blood from his eyes with one shaking hand and took in the ruin of his platoon. What he saw caused him to retch uncontrollably. He had no way of reaching the rail, so his vomit became a part of the foul mixture that filled the bottom of the barge.
The platoon had been together since the Nanking campaign, and now in a sense they would be together forevermore. One of the other survivors stopped screaming, but Nanten did not know why, and did not go to investigate. He did not wish to raise himself, lest another plane dive in to finish the job.