Episode 533: A Clash of Cultures
Footsteps rang on the floor of the keel passage as the prize crew responded
to their fellow's cry of surprise. Clarice and Emily found themselves
surrounded by inquisitive Japanese airmen. Their hosts seemed astonished to
see them. As well they might -- it couldn't be every day they came upon two
young women in flapper outfits strolling through a captured airship. They
chattered among themselves a babble of Japanese until their leader
arrived.
The commander looked more like a clerk than a warrior, reminding Clarice of
her aunt Tremendas observation that Japan had the most bureaucratic culture
in the world. "Korehanandesuka?" he demanded of his men.
The airman who'd discovered Clarice and Emily pointed at them and shrugged
helplessly. "Shirimasen."
The commander glared at the two young Aussies in annoyance.
"Wer bist du?" he asked them, making the natural assumption they
were part of the airships German crew.
"Sorry, mate. We dont understand French," Emily replied cheerfully.
This didn't seem to improve the commander's mood. "Who are you?" he tried
again.
"G'day!" said Clarice, getting into the spirit of things. "I'm Clarice
Blaine and heres my mate, Emily Wilcox. Whats your moniker?"
The commander seemed to struggle with this question, then dismiss it as
irrelevant. "What you doing on airship?" he demanded.
"We stowed away!" Emily announced with some enthusiasm.
Their host might have had less trouble interpreting this announcement
-- the expression was universal to many languages -- but it cannot have been
one he expected. "You hiding in ship without crew knowing?" he asked,
raising an eyebrow.
"Dinki di!" said Clarice. "It was fun!"
This did not seem to help. "What are this dinkidi?" the commander
asked suspiciously.
"Bob's your uncle!" Emily explained.
This too did not seem to help. The commander frowned as if mulling the
matter over, then reached a decision. "We taking you place answering
questions," he announced. "You no causing trouble or you getting...
problems."
Since the L-103 had no compartment suitable for use as a guardroom, so the
Japanese confined Clarice and Emily with the original crew in the section of
keel passage that had functioned as their quarters. The Germans seemed
every bit as surprised to see the two women as their captors had been.
"Guten abend, meine Damen," said a stocky Bavarian who looked every
inch the commercial airship captain. "I am Horst Krugman, master of this
vessel until..." he gestured toward their guards. "Who are you?"
"Pleased to meet you," Emily told him. "Im Emily Wilcox and this is my
mate, Clarice Blaine."
The German brightened "Ah! You are Kapitan Everetts friends!"
"You know us?" the blonde said in surprise.
"Ja!" Krugman said with a smile. "Kapitan Ritter warned
me about you. You must have stowed aboard to learn where we were taking the
Fat Mans weapons."
Emily and Clarice exchanged glances. This conversation was not developing
in quite the way they expected. Clarice studied the captain's expression
and noticed a frown.
"You do not seem to have been entirely happy with this cargo," she ventured
cautiously.
"Nein," Krugman replied sadly. "These are tod werkzeuge.
The War should have taught us all to reject such things, but with a vessel
this old, we must take whatever cargoes we can get. Do not worry. I will
keep your secret from the Japanisch."
The ancient S Class made poor time, and it was two days before the L-103
reached Sarah's island. The no-longer-quite-so-mysterious cruiser remained
on guard overhead while the prize crew brought the vessel down to the
mooring, then descended to moor at the mast beside it. This was Clarice and
Emilys first glimpse of the famed air station where all the intrigue had
begun two years before. The facility had been expanded since then, first by
the German nationalists, then by the Japanese, and now boasted three mooring
masts, a airship shed, a fuel depot, a hydrogen plant, and some very
substantial defenses. The latter looked quite formidable to the Aussies
untrained eyes -- strong enough to repel even attackers armed with the
Germans new glide bombs.
They had ample time to examine their surroundings as the Japanese led their
prisoners from the ship. The crew were marched off to a newly-constructed
prison camp at one end of the field. The women were escorted to a mansion a
short distant away. Here, guards in French uniforms took charge and brought
them to a hall where an immaculately dressed Frenchman with steel-hard eyes
held court, accompanied by a senior Japanese naval officer. This, Clarice
guessed, must be the infamous Governor and the leader of the Japanese
nationalists.
"Quest-ce que cest?" the Governor asked the other man.
"These are the stowaways my men found on the German vessel," the nationalist
leader replied.
The Governor studied his guests thoughtfully. He might have executed spies
out of hand, but he seemed prepared to offer two young women a different
sort of treatment. "Bonjour, mademoiselles," he said, in a voice
that must have served him well in encounters with the opposite sex.
"Welcome to my island. I am Governor of this territory. Might I ask who
you are?"
"Bob's your uncle!" said Clarice, which for all she knew might have been
true. "Im Clarice Blaine and she's Emily Wilcox."
Either the Frenchman didnt recognize their names or he was a very good
actor. "Alors," he replied suavely. "I understand that you
secreted yourselves aboard l'Allemande vessel in search of
adventure."
"Dinki di!" said Emily. There seemed no need to make things easy for the
fellow.
"Je comprends," the Governor assured them. "I must approve, for
I too was lured here by the romance of these islands. We shall endeavor to
make your stay pleasant." He turned and nodded to a servant. "Les
escorter jusqúà leur logement. Voyons ce que pensent le
Baron et la Baronne."
Their `logement' proved to be a one-room bungalow -- perhaps the
same one in which Iverson had been imprisoned two years before. Emily
studied the chamber as if evaluating how difficult it would be to escape
using the tools she carried in her handbag, then shruggged. It wouldnt be
easy, for their captors had taken some pains to reinforce the place.
"That went better than I hoped," she said at last. "At least that nong
didn't stick us in some dungeon."
"I reckon so," agreed Clarice, "but did you catch that bit about
`Le Baron et la Baronne? That must be the Warfields. Once they
see us, the game will be up."
"Dinki di," said Emily. "We need to bail out before they rock up."
Their conversation was interrupted by a voice from the door. "What are
you two doing here?"
They turned, then glanced at each other in surprise. "Strewth!"
exclaimed Clarice. "it's Natasha!"
Next week: When Irish Eyes Are Perplexed...
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