Ghosts of Bungo Suido

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Authors: P. T. Deutermann

BOOK: Ghosts of Bungo Suido
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This book is dedicated to the families of the 3,600 American submariners lost in the Pacific war, who, for the most part, will never know what happened to their loved ones other than that they remain on eternal patrol.

 

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

Not being a former submariner, I consulted several sources in preparing for this story. Clay Blair’s seminal work,
Silent Victory,
was my primary reference for the mechanics of the submarines, the personalities of the skippers, and the evolution of submarine tactics. In my opinion, Blair’s book is the best one out there on the subject of the so-called Silent Service. Laura Hillenbrand’s
Unbroken,
along with first-person depositions made after the war by ex-POWs, provided much of the information I needed to write about the POW experience in Japan. Don Keith’s book,
Final Patrol,
tells the stories of some of the more famous boats and their equally famous skippers during World War II, and Joseph Enright’s book,
Shinano,
tells the true and exciting story of how that giant carrier was actually sunk on her maiden voyage. I am indebted to the volunteers who maintain USS
Torsk
(SS-423) at the Baltimore harbor maritime museum, which I visited to get a feel for the physical aspects of a World War II diesel boat. As I did in
Pacific Glory,
I’ve taken some historical license with the timeline of events in this book in order to sustain the story.

Finally, I want to acknowledge the incredible bravery, fierce persistence, and professional stamina of those submariners who took the war to Japan while the rest of the navy was still picking up the pieces in Pearl Harbor and elsewhere. Their achievements were made at great cost, and their final resting places are, as the inscription reads at Arlington, known but to God.

 

CONTENTS

Title Page

Copyright Notice

Dedication

Acknowledgments

Part I: Lone Wolf

Chapter One

Chapter Two

Chapter Three

Chapter Four

Chapter Five

Chapter Six

Chapter Seven

Chapter Eight

Chapter Nine

Chapter Ten

Chapter Eleven

Chapter Twelve

Chapter Thirteen

Chapter Fourteen

Chapter Fifteen

Chapter Sixteen

Part II: Cast Away

Chapter Seventeen

Chapter Eighteen

Chapter Nineteen

Chapter Twenty

Chapter Twenty-One

Chapter Twenty-Two

Chapter Twenty-Three

Chapter Twenty-Four

Chapter Twenty-Five

Chapter Twenty-Six

Chapter Twenty-Seven

Chapter Twenty-Eight

Chapter Twenty-Nine

Chapter Thirty

Chapter Thirty-One

Chapter Thirty-Two

Chapter Thirty-Three

Part III: The Silent Service

Chapter Thirty-Four

Chapter Thirty-Five

Chapter Thirty-Six

Chapter Thirty-Seven

Chapter Thirty-Eight

Chapter Thirty-Nine

Chapter Forty

Chapter Forty-One

Books by P. T. Deutermann

About the Author

Copyright

 

Part I

LONE WOLF

 

ONE

Luzon Strait, October 1944

“Make your depth three hundred feet.”

The two planesmen turned their brass wheels together but in opposite directions. “Make my depth three hundred feet, aye, sir,” said the diving officer.

Gar Hammond felt the deck tipping down smoothly, but his attention remained on those screwbeats echoing audibly right through the hull as the Jap destroyer kept coming. Steady course and speed. No acceleration. Even better, he wasn’t echo ranging.

Yet.

He looked over at his exec, Lieutenant Commander Russ West, and watched him force himself to relax his grip on the console rail. “This is nuts,” West muttered, then glanced hastily in Gar’s direction, as if he’d thought it but not intended to actually say it out loud.

“Relax, XO,” Gar said, laughing. “Two thermoclines, remember? He’s deaf. As soon as he passes overhead he’ll be totally deaf.”

The exec managed a weak grin back, but the destroyer’s screwbeats were getting louder, that unmistakable
pah-pah-pah
sound making every man in the crowded control room clench his teeth. Gar noticed that no one in Control was making eye contact with anyone else; they’d been on enough patrols to know that fear was contagious. He also knew that someone in the control room wanted to shout out,
If we can hear the destroyer’s screwbeats, why can’t the destroyer’s sonar hear us?
Because, Gar thought, we’re being quiet. The destroyer is not.

This was the most dangerous phase of the tactic, the one his crew called Asking for It, behind his back, of course. Get out in front of a Jap convoy, submerge deep, let the targets and the escorts pass overhead, then rise to periscope depth behind the last escort and fire a torpedo right into his stern while the destroyer’s sonar was blinded by his own wake and propeller noises.

“Approaching three hundred feet,” the diving officer announced. The hull was creaking under the increased pressure, but Gar had taken
Dragonfish
down to almost 500 feet before. More importantly, back up, too, a happy modulation on that old aviator rule: You want the number of safe landings always to equal the number of takeoffs.

It was almost time to sprint.

Pah-pah-pah-pah,
louder now. The destroyer was almost directly overhead. If he’d detected them, this would be the moment when depth charges would start rolling off his fantail. He can’t detect us if he’s not pinging, Gar told himself. And even if he were pinging, those two thermoclines in the 300-foot water column above them should deflect his sonar beams. “Should” being the operative word.

Pah-pah-pah-pah.

Gar waited impatiently. They’d accelerate once he passed overhead, get right behind him, rise to periscope depth, take one firing observation, and shoot. He’d done this three times since taking command, and so far he’d never missed. He was, of course, fully aware of how nervous this made his whole crew. If that single torpedo did miss and the destroyer’s lookouts saw its wake slicing alongside from astern, she’d immediately roll depth charges right into the
Dragonfish
’s face.

Pah-pah-pah-pah.


Down
Doppler, bearing zero five five,” the soundman in the conning tower reported, the relief audible in his voice. The destroyer was headed away from them. Everyone strained his ears to detect any noises indicating the Jap had rolled depth charges, but all they could hear was those screwbeats, steady at about 12 knots, based on turn count, in the away direction.

Okay, Gar thought. Time to kill this hood.

“All ahead two-thirds,” he ordered. “And come right to zero five five.”

He saw the exec let out another deep breath. Eight knots was just about their top speed underwater, and they would entirely deplete the battery in less than one hour if they kept that up. Both of them scanned the array of instruments and gauges all around them in the control room. Gar felt the sudden surge of power as
Dragonfish
heeled into her turn. Control was, as usual, crowded and tense. The air was filled with the haze of diesel fumes and human sweat, mixed with a faint tinge of ozone as the batteries dumped amps.

“I’m going up,” he told the exec. “Diving officer, bring her to periscope depth. Handsomely, please.”

Once he’d climbed up into the conning tower he told the torpedo officer to make ready tubes one and two. The attack team seemed steady, especially now that the tin can above had gone past them without loosing a barrage of 500-pound depth bombs. The deck sloped upward as the Dragon rose to periscope depth. The conning tower was under red-light conditions, just like Control. It was dark outside, and Gar needed his eyes to be night-adapted once he raised the scope. Conn was even more crowded than Control.

“Passing two hundred feet,” the diving officer reported from down below.

“All ahead
one
-third.”

The helmsman acknowledged the order.

“Leveling at one hundred feet,” called the diving officer.

It wasn’t very hard for Gar to keep a picture of this tactical plot in his mind. Pausing the ascent was standard procedure. The last thing they wanted was for the boat to punch through periscope depth and broach in full view of the destroyer’s after lookouts. He should be about 800 yards in front of us now, Gar thought, well within visual range even though it was past sunset. Assuming you had the time, it was always best to stabilize and trim her at 100 feet, then rise slowly to periscope depth.

“Sound, confirm bearing.”

“Mushy bearing zero five niner, Cap’n. Plus or minus five degrees. I’m listening through his wake.”

“Zero five niner, aye. Helmsman, come right to zero five niner. Indicate turns for three knots. Sound, watch that Doppler carefully.”

“Sound, aye.” The Doppler, or pitch of the audible screwbeats, was a critical indication. Down Doppler meant that the destroyer was going away from them; up Doppler meant the opposite. Steady Doppler meant he was broadside to them and thus probably turning around. They waited.

“Steady at periscope depth,” the diving officer called.

“Indicating turns for three knots, and steady on zero five niner,” the helmsman reported.

Gar went to the periscope well. “You ready?” he asked the attack team.

“We have a solution,” the operations officer replied.

“Up scope,” Gar ordered. “This will be a firing observation.”

The electro-hydraulic motors down in Control whined as they sent the attack scope up to the surface, with Gar hunched over the eyepiece handles like a monkey as it rose, all elbows and knees. He could barely hear the torpedo data computer team comparing sound data to what their predicted firing solution plot was showing.

He trained the scope around to the last reported bearing of the destroyer so that he’d be looking right at him once the scope broke the surface. His eyes took a few seconds to adjust, and then he saw him, just a black blob in the darkness dead ahead of them, but with a phosphorescent wake pointing right at Gar’s aim point.

“Bearing,
mark
! Range is one thousand yards.
Down
scope.”

One second later he heard the magic words from the plotting team. “Bearing and plot agree. Torpedo running depth ten feet. Tube one ready. Plot
set
! Fire any time.”

“Fire one!”

They felt the sudden impulse of pressurized air in the boat as the firing flask expelled the torpedo and then dumped its residual compressed air into the sub rather than releasing a huge bubble outside. Doctrine called for a second torpedo, but Gar disagreed: The torpedo’s gyro was slaved to the ordered bearing. On a long-axis shot like this, if the first one missed, a second one would probably miss, too. One hit, however, would blow the after end of that bastard clean off, especially if the depth charges stacked on his fantail also exploded.

“Conn, Sound, fish is hot, straight, and normal.”

“Run time, twenty-one seconds,” said the ops boss, standing at the TDC—the torpedo data computer.

They all held their breath. Nothing happened for fifteen seconds.

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