William Marston looked down at the expanse of ocean to the east of his hut on Vella Lavella. That stretch of ocean ran from Bougainville down through the Solomon Islands and was known to the Allies as the "Slot". This long narrow channel was the primary route for Japanese ships in their quest to occupy the Solomons in order to attack and occupy New Guinea, Australia and New Zealand.
Through his binoculars, William saw a convoy of Japanese ships consisting of two cargo ships and three destroyers. Those were part of what the Allies called "The Tokyo Express", the convoys carrying troops and supplies that would gain The Japanese Empire a firm foothold on the Solomons.
William walked from his observation post on the side of Mount Nonda to the native hut thatched with palm fronds. Inside, he turned on his radio and called the coastwatcher headquarters in Queensland.
"Q, MAR here. Three destroyers two cargo to you."
The confirmation came back a few seconds later.
"MAR, Q here. Confirm three destroyers two cargo."
William had watched several of these convoys since he'd changed jobs from the supervisor of a copra plantation to coastwatcher. He'd been happy on Vella Lavella before the Japanese began expanding. First it was Manchuria, then China, and now it was the Solomons. Three months after Bougainville had been occupied, Vella Lavella had been evacuated by the Australian Navy. There had been a few people on the island that wouldn't leave, and William was one of them. He'd never run from anything in his life and he wasn't about to run from the Japanese.
When he stated his intention to stay on Vella Lavella, he was approached by a man in the uniform of an Australian Navy Captain.
The man waked up, smiled, and offered his hand.
"Mister Marston, I hear you would rather remain on Vella Lavella. May I ask why?"
William frowned.
"I put five years of my life into making this plantation work, and I intend for it to work again once this goddamned war is over. I don't want the goddamned Japs making a mess of everything."
The captain chuckled.
"Spoken like a true Australian. I'm Captain Reginald Avery by the way. If you're going to stay on Vella Lavella, perhaps you might do me a small favor."
William frowned.
"This sounds like I'm about to get a very dry coconut pushed up my arse."
Captain Avery had been filling his pipe. He lit it then, puffed out a couple plumes of acrid smoke, then tamped down the tobacco and lit it again. He puffed twice more, then smiled.
"No, nothing quite so harsh. It is a simple request, really."
He sucked twice more on the pipe and frowned because it had gone out.
"Damned tobacco gets too moist to burn in this intolerably wet climate."
He dug in his pocket for a match, then lit the pipe again and smiled.
"William, we're having the devil of a time keeping track of our little yellow friends. Since they occupied Bougainville, their convoys stop there until almost dark and then run down between the islands in the dark to deliver troops and supplies to the other islands to the south. It's the same with their planes during the day. They take off from Bougainville and head down the Slot toward Guadalcanal. Their day of reckoning is coming, but it will be a bloody shambles unless we can be ready to fight back now.
"What I need is a good man on Vella Lavella to watch the sea and air and radio back to Queensland on what the Japanese are doing. We'll relay that information to the US and Royal forces as soon as it's confirmed by one of my men on the other islands. That'll give our boys a fighting chance at the Japs instead of being sitting ducks until they see the bombers and fighters overhead. What would you say to being one of my coastwatchers?"
William laughed.
"I'd say any man who would volunteer for the job needs his bloody brain examined. When the Japs land on Vella Lavella, they'll search the island for any white men, and judging from what I've read, they have a way of convincing people to talk. Once they find out what they want to know, they just shoot them."
Captain Avery knocked the ashes out of his pipe and began filling it again from a leather pouch.
"So, you're saying it's impossible?"
William shook his head.
"Not impossible, but very difficult and dangerous. A man would have to stay in the mountains and he'd have to have a lot of supplies. That means he'd have to have natives to carry everything and he'd need supplies for them too."
Captain Avery lit his pipe again.
"Not a problem, William. I can furnish you with enough supplies for six men for six months. I'll supply you with a radio as well. Can't expect you to just yell all the way to Queensland, now can I."
"What if this man was discovered by the Japanese?"
Captain Avery puffed his pipe twice, then frowned.
"That's always a possibility. I can tell you we'd do everything in our power to get you off Vella Lavella if that happened. You'd have to work your way down to the coast and maybe canoe to Baga, but we'd try our best to get you off."
William thought about the offer. When the Japanese occupied Bougainville, he'd tried to enlist in the Australian Army only to find out that the limp that remained after a broken leg four years before made him ineligible for service. This was a way he could give help with the war effort while staying on Vella Lavella to watch over the plantation.
"If I was to do this, what supplies could you furnish?"
The four men, all natives of Vella Lavella, had struggled to get everything halfway up the side of Mount Nonda. The supplies were no problem because the canned goods were packed in small boxes. The radio wasn't quite as easy. The thing broke down into two sections -- the radio proper and the batteries that powered it. Each weighed about a hundred pounds, so each section was carried suspended on a pole by two men. Another problem was the generator needed to charge the batteries and fuel for the generator. That required another trip up the mountain with two men carrying the generator and two men carrying the five-gallon cans of fuel.
The last trip from the beach to the mountain was for the five Enfield rifles, two crates of ammunition for them, a gasoline stove, and the binoculars and case of maps and plane and ship silhouettes.
After two more days, the native men had built a palm-thatched hut for sleeping and eating and another hidden under some trees for the radio. William settled down to life as a coastwatcher. His native boys spent the days hunting for food in the jungle or fishing and were usually successful. A roast pig or a mess of fish was a welcome change from canned stew and stretched his supplies a little further. They were also watching for any Japanese troops that might have come ashore during the night.
During the day, William would listen for planes coming from Bougainville, and when he saw them, he'd radio Queensland with the number, type, and his best guess at altitude. Every night just before dark, William would look up the Slot with his binoculars, and if he saw any ships, he'd radio that information back to Queensland.
It was a little over a month since William set up his observation post that he watched the convoy of two cargo ships and three destroyers starting to move down the Slot. He continued watching them after radioing Queensland. The convoy was just entering Kula Gulf when shells began raining down on them. William couldn't see where the shells came from but assumed it was from US Navy ships. The Japanese ships returned fire and then turned back to the north. All but the last destroyer escaped unscathed. The final destroyer was hit amidships.
By the time the last destroyer was hit, the convoy had steamed up just to the east of Vella Lavella. William saw the blast and the resulting fires. Those fires lit the ship enough to show the list to starboard and the fact that she was rapidly sinking.
William went to bed that night congratulating himself for sounding the warning in time for action to be taken. One less destroyer meant fewer Japanese soldiers would be landing on the southern islands and would make it easier for the US Marines to push them off those islands.
The next morning, Manuia and Tamati, two of William's native boys, said they were going to hunt for crabs along the shore. They left while William was enjoying a breakfast of canned herring.