But the child that's born on the Sabbath day
Is fair and wise and good and gay.
Serena Giovanni glanced up from her work at the big clock on the wall. The large face clock indicated it was five thirty. That meant it was five fifteen, but she was already the only one left in her section. Putting all else firmly out of her mind, she returned to the decryption scale and finished the descramble she was working on.
Decrypting messages by hand was meticulous, exacting work. It required a lot of attention to detail and one mistake could set you back hours, because it would throw off the decrypt key. This one was from Combined Fleet. From the call letters, she assumed it was issued when Koga was still Commander-in-Chief. As the message gave up its secrets, she found it to be an ordinary fleet reassignment, sending Cruiser Division 8, from Truk to Lingga Roads, prior to the Battle for the Philippine Sea.
Serena took the decrypted message, along with the others she had completed that day and snapped a rubber band around them. She cleared her desk, put on her white gloves, grabbed her purse and started for the door. On her way, she dropped the decrypts into the slot marked for Commander Layton, the G-2 man assigned to Combined Fleet.
She headed up three flights of stairs and then down the long, antiseptically clean hallway, to where two GIâs stood guard at the door. One glanced at her ID badge with a bored expression and passed her a clip board so she could sign out. They were both good boys, but she avoided eye contact. They werenât much older than her twenty-two years, but both had served on Okinawa. They had the look of men many times older and the haunted expression in those eyes always chilled her.
âGânight Miss,â the shorter one said.
âGood night, Jeb,â she replied.
She took a deep breath and stepped out into the teaming humanity that flooded through the narrow road fronting the building. There were military personnel from all services, in jeeps and on foot. They were outnumbered by thousands of Japanese. Men, women, children, most in drab war issue clothing, although she occasionally saw a woman in a kimono or a man in what was left of his uniform. They were in general, a ragged, tattered, sad looking people and her heart went out to them. She had only to look east, towards what had been the business district to see the devastation the fire bombing raids had left in their wake.
Serena loved the oriental mode of dress, if she hadnât had such an affinity for it, she would have never noticed the girl. She was standing on a corner, wearing a beautiful white silk kimono, decorated with a delicate purple flower motif. Her face was freshly scrubbed, the blood serving as rouge and her hair had obviously been done up with attention to detail. She was beautiful, absolutely stunningly beautiful, reminding Serena of one of those porcelain china dolls she used to see at the county fair.
As she watched, the girl hesitantly tried to approach a fat army sergeant, but he took no notice of her and she drew back towards the corner of the building. Serena felt a lump in her throat and she fought back tears. It was an all too common sight. Women, with nothing left but their bodies to offer for food and shelter.
Donât get involved, she told herself, but she knew it was too late. She was already involved. Half her meager paycheck each month went to a Catholic war orphans relief fund. She did all her shopping at a local market, not so much because she enjoyed oriental food, although she was developing a taste for it, but because it allowed her to give more than just the half her paycheck she could afford. As she watched, the girl seemed to work up her courage to try again.
Serena saw two marines coming and realized, they wouldnât fail to take the girl up on it. Marines never missed a chance to get laid and after all they had been through, they had absolutely no sympathy for anyone Japanese.
She was moving before she thought, crossing the street, heedless of the traffic or blaring horns. The girl was reaching out, to touch one of the marines on the shoulder when Serena passed between them, catching the girlâs arm and pulling her along.
When she resisted, Serena stopped and faced her.
âCome with me,â she said, in her halting Japanese.
The girl eyed her curiously, but nodded and docilely followed. Serena led her through the maze of buildings, to the one she called home. Her apartment was on the third floor and the MP guarding the door gave her a quizzical look.
âWhat?â she said testily.
âNothing Maâm,â he replied quickly.
Once they were inside, she indicated the sofa. The girl seemed confused, but sat down, carefully folding her feet beneath her body.
Serena poured the girl a glass of lemonade and went back into the living room to hand it to her. She took it cautiously, delicately sniffed and then sipped. The look on her face as the sweet sour coolness hit her taste buds was as close to ecstasy as Serena had ever seen on a womanâs face. She drank greedily and seemed embarrassed when she finished and found Serena watching her.
âHow long?â Serena asked, pointing to her stomach.
The girl cocked her head, but didnât respond.
Serena could read, write and translate Japanese, but her training hadnât included conversational Japanese and she had been afforded little opportunity to practice speaking. She knew the language of war, of orders, of Combined Fleet directives, but she found herself searching her memory for the phrase to eat.
Giving up, she pointed to her stomach again, then pantomimed eating.
The girl seemed to understand and fired off a flowing, beautiful sentence that was spoken so fast Serena couldnât make out more than one word in ten.
âSlow,â she said in Japanese.
The girl spoke again, very slowly and Serena got the gist. A fucking week. She hadnât eaten in a fucking week!
âWhat kind of a world is this?â she muttered as she went into the kitchen, took off her gloves and pulled out the kaka she used for cooking rice.