With communications silent for the time being, the only sounds Exeter could hear were the crash of the waves against her hull, the whistle of snow laden wind, and the hum of her engines. She tightened her scarf in an attempt to ward against the biting winds, and led Leander and Achilles into the storm.

Immediately, visibility dropped. Snow whipped by Exeter's face as she searched for any sign of the Abyssal. Her spotlights swept the seas, back and forth, but even their powerful beams could not pierce the rapidly worsening weather.

Ah winter storms in the Atlantic, Truly miserable things those are.

Minutes turned to hours as the three cruisers searched. The squall had evolved into a full blown blizzard, buffeting Exeter and her companions with heavy winds and dense flurries of snow.

Finally, Exeter saw something through the snow. A figure, dashing towards her. Exeter's spotlights and secondary battery swiveled over, only for the snow to disperse and reveal the illusion.

...Ghosts? Is Exeter seeing ghosts here? If so, of whom? Or is the stress of things with Abyss Spee starting to get at her?

Another flash of movement in the snow drew Exeter's attention. A figure moving laterally past her. It was almost certainly a destroyer. A spotlight turned, and illuminated more snow. There was no destroyer in sight.

"This snow is messing with me." She said aloud, finally breaking the silence between squadron course changes.

"Exeter?" Leander sounded more concerned than confused.

"I keep seeing things in the snow. A figure moving, just out of sight. I swear it's a destroyer, but when I look closer, all I see is snow."

"That's concerning. Perhaps use your radar if you start seeing things again?" Leander suggested.

Wait she's seeing a phantom Destroyer? This... this doesn't body well. Its a good thing that Exeter brought it up with her squadron mates. Sometimes talking about it with others can help conform whether you're just seeing things or if something's up.

Leander has the right idea, use the radar. It'll be a great help clearing out the Fog of War.

For a while longer, the search continued. Exeter occasionally saw a figure in the snow, but radar revealed nothing. Nothing but snow and sea.

As the blizzard continued to worsen, Exeter felt her heart drop. If the tank still remained within the storm, surely they would have found it by now.

"Leander, Achilles, formation turn to port, on course bearing 250. We're heading back to Norfolk."

Exeter is still seeing stuff I see. This isn't boding well.

Exeter pulled into the turn, and saw Leander follow dead astern. She also saw another figure in the snow. Much clearer than in previous times, too. It was a destroyer, probably Tribal-class, made of pure snow. Exeter couldn't make out any details to ascertain the destroyer's identity, just that she was running from something.

Exeter's spotlight swiveled over to the snowy destroyer, and it dispersed as if Exeter's eyes were playing tricks on her. But through the snow, Exeter spied something else.

a phantom tribal-class Destroyer?... could...could it be the ghost of one of Intrepid's sisters? Could it be trying to lead her to something?

Black steel reflected the spotlight's prowling beam.

"Contact! Five thousand yards, dead astern!" Exeter shouted, her guns shifting towards the Abyssal. Four and eight inch guns roared in a ripple as Exeter pulled a hard turn to bring her broadside to bear.

Her first salvo went long, sailing over the Abyssal's head, then all went quiet. Snow rushed and obscured her view of the tanker.

"Where'd she go?" Leander asked, guns spinning towards where the Abyssal had been mere moments before.

CONTACT, CONTACT! Sink that Fucker Exeter! I know you can do it!

"Can't see her." Exeter grunted, spinning up her radar. The device was nearly frozen in place from the ice, but began spinning. An outline of the Abyssal appeared over Exeter's vision, along with one of Leander and Achilles.

The heavy cruiser's guns roared again, narrowly missing the suddenly evasive tanker. Wind and waves buffeted Exeter, throwing off her aim as she fired. Leander and Achilles joined in, but had the same abysmal results.

Eventually, Exeter lost track of time to the dull roar of her guns, fruitlessly trying to catch the Abyssal in heavier weather than she had been designed for. Reload, fire, miss, repeat. The fusilade of fire from the three cruisers never managed more than the occasional straddle on the tanker as they fought to close the range against the seas.

You know, while I've seen what a shipgirl (that has it) using their radar looked like before. I don't think I've ever seen it depicted in this manner before, with the initial spin up and all. Its very much an interesting take.

But what has me worried is the fact that the girls keep missing or getting close but not striking a hit. The rough seas also concerns me greatly. Though I'm pretty sure that if Exeter's guns were tied to her radar, she would got that tanker.

Finally, the radar picture over the Abyssal flickered in conjunction with one of Exeter's salvoes. She heard a loud roar as something exploded.

The heavy cruiser raised her arm with a triumphant whoop.

Out of the corner of her eye, Exeter noticed another snowy destroyer. An I-class this time, though clearly not Intrepid. A look of panic and worry was evident on the mystery destroyer's face.

YES GOOD WORK ON BLOWING THAT BITCH OUT OF THE WATER EXETER! That's a good cause for celebration!

Wait... why is that snowy destroyer having a look of panic and worry on her face? Unless...oh no.

A heavy shell ripped Exeter's extended arm off at the elbow, tearing her X turret away from her hull and dropping it into the frothing sea.

"Where is she!" Exeter roared in pain. "Where is that cowardly bitch?!"

"New contact! Starboard side, maximum radar range!" Achilles called.

OH SHIT! OH FUCK!! ITS HER! ABYSS SPREE!

This is bad, really really bad! Exeter girl, play it carefully now. Ya just lost a turret and a fair bit of firepower with that!

"Leander, finish the tanker. Achilles, with me." Exeter's voice had descended from a roar to a cold fury that she didn't recognize.

The heavy cruiser shifted course, barreling straight for the new contact. She knew who she was shooting at as her radar picked up the target. Deutschland-class pocket battleship Admiral Graf Spee, as corrupted by the Abyss. A silhouette that haunted many of Exeter's dreams appeared in her vision as the radar contact solidified.

Yes Finish that tanker off and then fall ba-

Exeter no! Don't charge in like that! I know you want to send that thing to the bottom but think about it girl. You're not in great shape, don't be stupid! Fall back! Fall back!

For every salvo that Exeter fired, the Abyssal matched with one of its own. But while Exeter was being pounded in every direction by the wind and sea, the Abyssal seemed to have no problems.

Abyssal spookiness? Likely, veyr likely, which is bad. Very Very bad, Exeter, please turn and run. Please. You have people back home that are worried about ya.

Exeter furiously closed the range, desperate to land any sort of hit. Her shells landed erratically around the Graf Spee, never close enough to bracket or straddle, while the Abyssal grew more and more accurate as she closed.

"Break off!" Achilles shouted, pulling away and letting loose with her full broadside. Exeter ignored her companion's warning, too focused on closing the range.

Goddammit Exeter! Listen to what Achilles is saying! Break off! Break off!

The Graf Spee had haunted too many of her dreams. She would not let her target get away.

An eleven-inch shell dove deep into Exeter's bow. It detonated against the barbette of her foremost turret, damaging and disabling the guns.

She did not care. With all her remaining guns, Exeter tried to rain hell upon the Abyssal Graf Spee.

OH dear god, Exeter, you're gonna get as screwed up as you did at River plate at this damn rate! Or even worse! Break off and get help. get healed! Let the Heavier ships come in and deal with the Pocket battleship.

Exeter heard an explosion far astern. She heard Leander's confirmation of a kill on the tanker.

She felt another of the Graf Spee's shells rip into her flank, tearing a massive gash before blowing a hole for water to spill into.

She heard Achilles' desperate cries for her to pull off.

She saw the pleading faces of the two snowy destroyers, silently begging her to stop.

Exeter... no. Don't do this, how do you think Intrepid is gonna feel if you get yerself killed here? Turn back, please turn back. Get yourself patched up and then you can try again later. Even the ghosts of Intrepid's sisters are pleading with you to not throw your life away.

Exeter did not care.

"Get out of my head!" She roared at the source of her nightmares. Her remaining rifles echoed the roar.

A single shell exploded amidships on the Abyssal.

And then a volley ruined her last turret.

Oh god, Exeter you bloody fool! You're letting revenge get the better of you!

Was it worth it? Was it worth getting shot up like that just to get one single hit? Because unless that pocket battleship went up Jutland-style with that hit, it sure as hell ain't worth losing all of your turrets.

Disarmed and heavily wounded, Exeter raised her last weapon. Blackness encroached on her vision as she tried to aim a spread of torpedoes.

The sound of rushing water reached Exeter's ears, and she collapsed.




Exeter! NO!

Oh god, is she even still alive? I'm gonna pray to god, SECNAV, anyone, that HMS Exeter still lives. Dear god, the damage she took and all that, its reminding me of what she took during the Battle of River Plate. Wait... all of her guns knocked out? Severly damaged and trying to launch torps?

My god. Its a almost exact repeat of what happened to her during the battle of the River Plate ain't it? Ain't it? I'm going to hope it's that and not worse.

Operating on that idea, Exeter is gonna kick herself real hard for inadvertently repeating history again. And I do hope Leander gives her a good smack upside the head after her repairs are done for being such an idiot.

Seriously, what the hell Exeter! Don't get yerself almost killed like that! There's a metric tonne of stuff you need to still do in life! OH I fucking Hope Leander and Achilles give her a right scolding for her doing a idiotic stunt like that.

I can't fully fathom how this is going to affect Intrepid once the news gets to her. She'll either break all together, or she'll get consumed by rage. And since Destroyers for the most part only have room for one emotion at a time, having a Destroyer consumed by Rage is a very very bad Thing. For anyone and everyone involved. Because if Anger is the emotion that's in a Destroyer's heart... they'll do pretty much anything and everything. To destroy whatever it is that is the source of their anger.

all in all this was a good chapter and one that has me holding my breath till the next update.
 
Omake: Wolf... doggo... same thing, right?
Doggos! Wait...

[=]

Bloodshot eyes snapped open amidst the frantic barking and desperate-sounding radio chatter, causing Nachi to groan as she slowly sat herself up. Her radio operator was reporting multiple distress calls from one of the night squadrons, who were reporting heavy damage among their unit.


"Shit," she hissed, before quickly grabbing her normal outfit, not really caring about looking prim and proper.


Her crew were already rushing to battlestations, and even though her rigging wasn't on her, she could still feel the shells being loaded into the breeches, including illumination rounds for her No. 2 gun, and incendiary tracers for her many Type-96 AA guns. While aircraft were unlikely to be an issue, fast moving torpedo boats were, and she knew her main battery guns couldn't traverse fast enough to maintain track on targets like that. The 25mm singles, on the other hand, could, her crew remembering the exploits of Laffey and O'Bannon against poor Hiei during that bloody night engagement near Guadalcanal.


Bursting out the doors, she saw one Ensign Jones on the verge of a panic, eyes wide and hands twitching. "Night Squadron Three made contact with hostile forces, and took heavy damage! Corgi thinks that this is the opener for an Abyssal assault on New Orleans! You need to get your forces out there now!"


"Where are Atago and her group!?"


"Too far out!"


Matilda ran off as Isokaze and Hamakaze ran up to her, uniforms on and trying not to yawn. Nachi glared at them, teeth gritted. "Get yourselves together!" She barked. "We've trained for these kinds of engagements!"


They vaguely nodded, as she led them out of the building. Sirens were already blaring, and the helicopters were already spinning up their blades. A pilot rushed up to her, snapping to salute. "Ma'am, I'd be having my chalks provide support, but they're needed to patrol the coast for Abyssal landing parties!"


"That's fine! We can handle the enemy ships!" Nachi shouted back. "Now go!"


He dashed back off, strapping his helmet on, as Nachi began doing a quick radio check. All sets seemed to be functioning well.


The three made their way to the water, rigging flashing to existence as they felt the oddness of the Mississippi push against them. Crazed yapping followed them, as the daytime PT squadrons lept into the water, hind legs kicking furiously as they assumed a screening formation ahead of them. They yipped and barked excitedly, though Nachi could tell there was a definite worry to the noises. Their comrades were in trouble, after all.


"Once we clear the delta, set course to one-five-five and prepare to engage the enemy!" She ordered. "Isokaze, I need you on anti-submarine duty! Make sure that nothing sneaks up on us! Hamakaze, you're with me on trying to clear out any hostile torpedo boats! Use your AA guns if you have to! Go!"


"Hai!"


Her radio crackled to life, on the frequency used to order the PT squadrons around. "Nachi-actual, Nachi-actual, this is Dog-actual, do you copy?"


It was the man who somehow was charged with handling the dogs, one Lt. Corgi. "Nachi copies. Go ahead."


She could hear him trying to remain calm, heavy breaths sounding over the airwaves. "Nachi, the PT squadrons suspect that this is the opening phase of an Abyssal assault against New Orleans. We cannot let that happen. Use all available means to drive them back and save Squadron Three!"


"Shit."


"Nachi-actual?"


Gathering herself, Nachi answered. "Nachi copies all. Prevent enemy amphibious forces from landing on New Orleans and aid friendly PT squadrons."


"Good hunting, girls! Out!"


"An invasion?" Nachi heard Isokaze ask. "First Hawaii, now this…"


"We'll stop them," Nachi countered. "We have to."


"I do hope we can."


She felt tense, between those fears, and the fact that there was little intel on what those dogs were facing. For all she knew, it was a battleship, not unlike Atomic Battlecruiser Princess or the ones sunk during their retreat from Hawaii.


But above it all, she could hear the war drums beating.


The lights along the Mississippi grew fewer and fewer, before finally darkness settled in. A low sigh escaped Nachi, who, while used to fighting in the dark, knew that it was far more dangerous. She checked over her oxygen torpedoes, making sure they were secure. Illumination rounds were loaded into the 5" DP mounts, and her crew were on high alert, knowing that any missed torpedo boat could sink her.


The silence was practically deafening, as she looked up towards the sky. It was a rather clear night, the moon a crescent, and the stars above bright and endless. Looking back down, she inspected her guns, making sure that they were in good condition. Damage control teams stood by, while gunnery crews had their hands ready to start taking shells off the racks.


"Oh, Ashigara. You would love this," she quietly muttered to herself. Her beloved younger sister greatly enjoyed the fight, happy for every victory earned. However, victory would prove to be a challenge, this time. They were but three ships and a large number of PT boats, against an unknown enemy.


The river twisted and turned, thankfully not too sharply, though they could only accelerate to flank speed once they cleared the delta. Nachi hated it, considering the enemy was out there, and they would likely lose forces with each moment that passed without something being sunk.


As she saw clear ocean ahead, her radar picked up multiple fast-moving contacts, and the dogs were happily yipping away, as they accelerated to flank and began their intercept. "Isokaze! Hamakaze! Prepare for combat! We have inbound torpedo boats, bearing One-Four-Zero!"


Thankfully her other four guns had the high explosive rounds loaded, though something told her Type-3 shells would have been better. Autocannons broke the silence, as yellow and green tracers split the sea, and the three heavier ships joined in, a simple, yet no less lethal, symphony of 25 and 127mm gunfire. Illumination shells arced high into the air, casting their harsh, deathly glow onto the sea below.


"Enemy destroyer!" Hamakaze called. "American four-stacker!"


"I'll handle it!" Nachi replied. "Main battery guns, sequential fire! Engage!"


Her 8" rifles rippled across the sea, shells bracketing the target, as her secondaries joined in, 5" rounds hitting the bridge in a brief flash. Her next salvo hit the magazines, lifting the monster from the water before it crashed down, flames burning brightly as smaller explosions rocked it, no doubt from its AA munitions cooking off. However, a final blast forced the cruiser to shield herself, before realizing that she had nailed one of the bastards that had been causing so much trouble.


A smile spread across her face. Her gunnery crews would have to be rewarded for managing this kind of accuracy.


"Dog-actual, this is Nachi," she radioed in. "Enemy minelayer confirmed sunk! Currently engaged with hostile PT boats!"


"Understood, Nachi! Don't let them tear up the dogs!"


Her 5" mounts went to work, as did her Type-96 AA guns, tracers streaking towards the shadowy forms of the PT boats, desperately trying not to hit the dogs. One down. Two down. A pained yelp as a dog took fire. The violence was a blur, and it was in a moment that the last hostile PT boat exploded and sank, leaving the sea silent once more.


"Who's hit?" Nachi called out. Two or three dogs barked, clearly pained. "Return to base! Now!"


The wounded dogs sailed past her, making their way up the Mississippi behind them, as the remainder regrouped. All were good on ammunition, while a few began working on hostile mines. Thankfully, the sweep didn't take long.


The group continued on their course, cautious for contacts. Nachi silently cursed the lack of Saratoga or Alaska's presence, nor that of the Royal Navy, who were spreading themselves thin in the Atlantic, desperately searching for an Abyssal Graf Spee.


"Atago, do you copy?"


"Nachi? Goodness, I'm glad to hear your voice again! We're about another two or so hours out, but haven't run into anything yet!"


"Keep us posted. My group and I have the daytime PT squadrons with us, and we're moving to assist Squadron Three."


"I copy! Stay safe out there!"


The screams of fighters echoed in the distance, the base's F-15s, most likely. Nachi shook her head. Considered excellent aircraft, only to suffer under the effects of the Abyssals.


The recent engagement had them on edge, though. Anything could be lurking out there, perhaps even beneath the waves. But no undersea contacts were reported, which, while strange, was fortunate.


However, their moment of peace and quiet was broken by the sounds of pained barking, as the PT boats made their way towards their distressed comrades. Hamakaze and Isokaze were quick to turn on their searchlights, revealing blood in the water, and PT boats in bad shape. How any of them remained afloat was beyond her.


Her mouth hung open, as the dogs swam over to their distressed comrades, tending to wounds and trying to rig up towing lines. She knew it was the perfect place for an ambush, though, and waved Isokaze and Hamakaze to turn off their searchlights, hoping that nothing spotted them.


She counted the seconds that passed by, before letting out a low sigh. The enemy was out there, but maybe were slow to come in for the kill. She felt her hair standing on end, though, and that sense that something was definitely nearby. Scanning the horizon, she saw the stars be blotted out by a silhouette, too dark and distant to make out, but it was still clearly the enemy.


"Illumination rounds! Now!"


5" guns barked and sent the shells skyward, before they finally ignited and cast their red glow onto the sea, revealing a cruiser with guns in an eerily similar layout to hers. For a moment, she thought it was Maya, before a flash of light against steel revealed they were 6" triples, not 8" doubles. Brooklyn. Machine gun cruiser.


"Isokaze! Hamakaze! Move! Move!"


The two destroyers immediately began falling back, as Nachi let loose a snap salvo, rounds falling short of target, but it was enough to catch its attention, guns turning towards her. 5" rounds began falling, hitting a turret, but doing little against it. It was a point-blank duel, and she had missed the first shot.


"Shit!"


The guns fired, Nachi howling as 6" shells exploded against her hull, sending splinters through her superstructure and knocking out AA guns and searchlights, but she soon had a second salvo ready to go, loaded with the armor-piercing rounds needed to kill the thing. Her crews made the adjustments, and clouds of flame and smoke erupted from her rifles, followed by explosions from the monstrosity, as it, too, returned fire.


Rounds continued to pelt her, blood running down her face as Nachi prepared her torpedo tubes. All she had to do was keep the thing pinned—


A column of fire and water erupted from its bow, a torpedo no doubt having hit it, as fires erupted across the front. An unholy-sounding shriek echoed across the water, as another pair of columns shot up from the other side. The Abyssal was starting to list, 5 and 6" guns firing furiously, trying to score hits on her in the hopes that a magazine would be hit, but to no avail.


Nachi found herself making best possible speed away from the wreck as it slipped beneath the gentle waves, bits of flaming wreckage marking its watery grave. Strange. American ships were bitches to put down.


"That was too easy…"


Her damage control crews worked to seal whatever bulkheads they had to. She had taken a hit or two below the waterline, and could feel the sting of seawater inside of her. Nothing too bad, thankfully, though she would have to reduce her speed.


More shells came down, roaring before sending columns of water skyward. "I've taken shrapnel!" She heard Hamakaze cry out.


"Evade! Evade!" Nachi ordered, as she put her boilers into action. Even with her reduced speed, the seawater still stung, even though it was minor damage. Pushing through, she scanned the horizon for flashes, fire, anything to tell her where the rounds were coming from. Another set came down, a trio of splashes erupting in front of her.


More American cruisers, no doubt.


Her radar fired up, and spotted multiple surface contacts at close range. Dammit, it was an ambush!


The dogs barked excitedly as they rushed forward, clearly sensing the enemy within range. Hopefully they could maintain stealth and close the range. Fire, however, erupted from them as their autocannons blazed at nearby targets, sickly green tracers coming back towards them. "Another wave of torpedo boats!"


Searchlights crawled across the water, as Nachi felt her remaining AA crews spin the guns towards the targets. They were within two klicks, just in range of her 25mm mounts, which promptly opened up on dark forms closing in. More rounds came down in the confusion, bracketing her and sending shrapnel into her AA mounts, silencing the guns. More dogs rushed to her aid, their guns blazing at the incoming boats, sending two down in flames, and forcing the others to turn away. Nachi threw her rudder hard into them, her lookouts calling out inbound torpedoes a few moments later.


500 meters.


450 meters.


400 meters.



Her hull began to ache from the hard maneuver, as the warheads continued to close distance.


150 meters.


100 meters.



Nachi braced, gritting her teeth for the inevitable severing of her bow, before someone began calling an increasing distance.


150 meters.


200 meters.


Clean miss.



Her crew cheered, as Nachi let out a sigh of relief. Her remaining crews drew beads on the hostile PT boats and managed to down one of them, fire erupting from its dark form before exploding, perhaps from its ammunition cooking off.


But more rounds continued to come down, and whoever it was had begun to zero in once more. Water erupted around her, and she could see fire and smoke billowing towards the horizon. A cruiser of some sort, but what kind?


"I need that enemy cruiser lit up, now!"


Hamakaze and Isokaze fired off another burst of illumination rounds, that red glow revealing the shadowy form of the ship, and Nachi was quick to turn her guns to engage, as she began working to identify it.


Three main guns, tripod mast, clipper bow. Her eyes widened, as she heard the Abyssal let out an unholy warcry. That voice… she remembered hearing that voice, wrong as it was. Her thoughts drifted back to her first life, during the campaigns to secure the Southern Resource Area, where she and her sisters did battle with the desperate Western powers, who had underestimated their capabilities and paid the price. It was that American heavy cruiser, their flagship, the one that had given them trouble during that time.


That Galloping Ghost rode once again, and she was unamused to see her home waters host to Japanese ships.
 
Boy, Frisco is gonna be pissed when she finds out about a Abyssal copy of her cousin.
That would be Boise. She was with the ABDA force. I think one of the Omaha's was there as well, but I can't remember. I know there was one with the Far East fleet. Marblehead was part of ABDA but she wasn't at Java. No, she was on a one ship world cruise after getting bombed in the Massakar Straights.
 
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James Lemuel Holloway, Jr., USN became captain of USS Iowa October 28, 1944, seventy four years ago today. He attained the rank of 4-star Admiral, the father of future Navy CNO and captain of USS Iowa on this date

"With his vessel operating as flagship of several important striking and covering forces...Holloway rendered distinguished service throughout the intensive actions and, by his brilliant leadership and outstanding skill, contributed materially to the extensive and costly damage inflicted on the enemy."
Holloway operated his battleship with characteristic flair, recalled Rear Admiral Ralph Kirk James, who had been the maintenance officer responsible for repair work on damaged ships at Manus when Iowa arrived at that base to fix shafting problems on 25 December 1944. "Jimmy Holloway was charging up the harbor with this big battleship, the biggest I'd seen, and I was getting more and more nervous." Alarmed, James warned Holloway to reduce his speed before entering the drydock. "'Oh no,' [Holloway] said...He got the ship just about halfway into the dry dock when he ordered full speed astern. The Iowa shook like a damned destroyer and stopped just where she was supposed to be." Unfortunately, the backwash from the engine reversal swept away the drydock support blocks from underneath the ship, and James and his crew had to spend an extra three hours resetting the blocks before Iowa could dock. Afterward, James discovered a grey streak in his hair. "I can tell you the moment it was born: when Holloway pulled his high-speed throttle-jockey stunt on me."
 
Omake: Wolf... doggo... same thing, right?
"Shit…"


Nachi felt her jaw fall to the sea as she gazed upon the illuminated form of the Abyssal heavy cruiser, an old opponent from her previous life. Houston was back, and sought revenge for the savaging of the Asiatic Fleet, all those years ago.


The PT Corgis growled and barked, eager to be let loose. Nachi felt herself throwing her rudder hard starboard, and a moment later, she saw fire and smoke erupt from the form, 8" rounds hurtling towards her. Pain erupted as one ricocheted off her side, while more rounds came down in close proximity, sending shrapnel and shockwaves through her.


"Nachi!" She heard Isokaze cry out.


"I'm still combat-capable! Lay down cover fire while I close in for a torpedo run!"


She turned again, more rounds passing over her, one so close that she felt her hair rustle from the pressure wave. She was fortunate to be no mere human, whose head would have been messily ripped off at best. Her main rangefinders were still operational, and she had plenty of shells in her magazines. It had been too long since she was able to sortie with a full combat load, but she knew not to needlessly waste her munitions. Breeches slammed shut as her guns began traversing towards the Abyssal Houston, her gunnery crews working on a solution as more illumination rounds came down, and the dogs began closing in to light the demon up with their spotlights.


"Main battery, switch to salvo fire! Engage! Engage!"


Nachi felt her whole body shudder as her guns fired off in unison, rounds falling short and ahead. A return salvo erupted from Houston, and seconds later, columns of water erupted short of her. It was clear that the range was closing to a dangerous distance, but she needed to put that thing down.


"Secondary batteries! Clear to fire!"


Her crews followed the order, as she delivered a full broadside against Houston, as it, too, responded with its secondaries. Shells rained down steadily around her, her rival focusing more on rate of fire over accuracy. Her salvo had straddled the target, and her torpedoes were armed and ready to fire. Another salvo went out before she shifted to port, the return fire coming down just behind her. She felt the sting of shrapnel, but her crew reported no damage to her oxygen torpedoes, and so she cut loose, feeling the compressed air forcing the fish out, splashing down cleanly.


It was clear Houston was a good shot, given that no searchlights or illumination rounds came from her, but she knew that could change in a heartbeat. Her secondary batteries fired again, and she could hear the rounds exploding against Houston, shrill cries of pain coming from the darkened form.


They wouldn't be enough, however.


"Nachi!" She heard Hamakaze radio in. "Isokaze and I are engaged with enemy destroyers, two of them!"


Goddammit. Nachi found herself raising her arms in a shielding motion as more rounds from Houston came down. "I'm currently engaged! Use the dogs if you have to!"


"Understood!"


It was very much an ambush, though likely a poorly-executed one. Something kept them from properly coordinating, Nachi thought as she fired off a return salvo. Were they ordered not to? If so, why? Their flagship could have easily sunk the three of them in short order, and massacred the dogs, leaving nothing but bloody tatters to wash ashore. Four ships had already been lost over the past two weeks or so. Surely they were learning, right?


The pain of 5" shells slamming into her broke Nachi's train of thought, a loud grunt coming from her before another salvo of 8" rounds came down, one punching straight through her deck. Blood seeped from the wound as she returned fire, before she changed course and closed the range once more. Another 5" round punched clean through her bow, water stinging as it came in with each crest of her hull. She could deal with the hit.


Her rounds had managed to hit Houston, however, setting a fire towards her aft, which meant she hit the cruiser's fuel stores. No longer would she need illumination rounds or lights, as a reply from Houston fell behind her. Nachi let loose from her secondaries, rounds pelting her counterpart's superstructure, hopefully disabling searchlights, while the return salvo from Houston's secondaries hit one of hers, knocking the gun out of commission. Dammit.


But Houston was making the same mistakes, it seemed. She had barely changed course, and her oxygen torpedoes were closing in. As if to answer, a huge column of water shot up from the cruiser's stern, the section having no doubt been blown off. The bitch was dead in the water now, and all that was left to do was pelt her into submission.


"Come on!" She shouted. "If you wanted revenge, come and take it!"


Houston answered with another salvo from her main battery, shells coming down, one going through her upper belt, another just behind her bridge. Pain shot through her as she let loose with another broadside, watching as explosions erupted from the crippled Abyssal. It was perhaps unfortunate that she decided not to carry reloads for her torpedoes, but she still had her other launchers ready, just in case.


She maintained her course, staying roughly parallel to Houston as she let out salvo after salvo of 5 and 8" shells, pounding Houston, which was already starting to lift out of the water. Her guns were no doubt disabled by this point, the list growing to be too much. Nachi began resetting her aim, hoping to find Houston's magazines and finish the duel.


"Nachi!" She heard Atago radio in. "We're almost at your location! I can see fires glowing on the horizon! What's your status?"


"Finishing off a hostile cruiser!" Nachi replied. "I've taken damage, but am still combat-capable!"


"Understood! We'll be right— incoming fire! Tanikaze! Urakaze! Evade!"


More hostile forces. Great.


Her guns fired again, shells punching clean into Houston. Steam and fire erupted as her boilers were hit, drawing an infernal scream from the demon as one of its guns futilely fired back. Shells arced high overhead, causing Nachi to shake her bloodied head.


"You fought well again!" She called out. "But once more, you underestimate us!"


She considered turning around and scuttling the Abyssal with oxygen torpedoes, but decided not to waste them, not when she didn't bring reloads. Her guns aimed and fired, a brilliant explosion erupting from Houston's fore as her magazines exploded, sending fiery shrapnel abroad. Some landed on Nachi, but her crews had taken a page from the PT squadrons and grabbed modern fire extinguishers, containing the blazes before they could threaten her.


They were slacking off on discipline, but she would forgive them this time.


Looking to her side, she saw Hamakaze and Isokaze exchanging fire with Abyssal destroyers, before one broke in two from a torpedo strike, the illumination rounds above displaying the scene for all who wished to see. The other began turning around, no doubt dumping its torpedoes as her two destroyers began evading. Nachi began sailing towards them, as she noted the flashes of gunfire on the horizon. Atago and her group had arrived, and were still engaged.


"Atago, this is Nachi! Status?"


"Currently engaged with an Abyssal cruiser! I've taken hits, and one of my guns suffered a jam!"


"Understood! Light it up, and I'll try and provide support!"


"I copy!"


The red flares lit up a few seconds later, as Nachi felt her guns spin around, and her crews work on finding a solution. Her main rangefinder was somehow undamaged, though she had lost one of her secondary ones, not that she would need them. Looking towards the engagement, she saw another five-gunned cruiser starting to fall back, alongside a four-stacked destroyer. "Atago? Can you have your destroyers engage that minelayer?"


"They're doing their best to sink it, but are under fire from the cruiser!"


Dammit. "Understood! I'll be providing fire support shortly! Stay clear!"


Her crews reported a solution on the hostile CL, and her guns were loaded and ready. "Main battery, salvo fire! Engage!" Her guns roared, before she heard barking. One of the PT boats was coming towards her, for some reason. "Stay clear, dammit!" She shouted, as her crews reported the shells falling slightly behind. Her loaders worked hard to get the shells into the breeches, adrenaline rushing through them, no doubt, just like her. Or at least, something like it.


Another salvo, and reports of a bracket. She had the range, and her crews began making the needed adjustments as more flares lit up the Brooklyn. A third salvo went out, and her observers reported confirmed hits, including at least one disabled gun.


"I think you hurt it!" Reported Atago over the radio. "I'm firing!"


Her observers watched as Atago let out a salvo, shells striking into the Abyssal's stern and disabling another turret. Nachi added another broadside into the mix, as the two began circling around the stricken light cruiser, pounding it into submission as the minelayer it was covering exploded under the fire of Urakaze and Tanikaze. 6" rounds landed near Nachi, but nowhere close enough to threaten her. She replied with more of her heavier rounds, landing more hits on the dark reflection of the American, as Atago cut loose again. Eventually the Abyssal foundered, eliciting cheers from her crew.


"Pan-paka-pan~!" Atago cheered. "Hooray for teamwork!"


"Atago, status?"


"I'm okay-ish. Took a hit to one of my guns, but that can be fixed up. Another to my fuel tanks, but I should be able to make it back to base. A catapult's out, but I didn't need it anyway. Same goes for my cranes…" she groaned, realizing that yes, she had taken hits and they hurt. "How 'bout you?"


"Lost most of my light AA, a hit to the bow, another to the deck below my catapults, another through the bow, a secondary gun lost, and my superstructure has several new holes in it, too." She said. "Let's regroup, shall we?"


Another dog came up, however, letting out rather distressing-sounding barks. It was reporting that one of theirs was in very bad shape and was in need of a tow. Nachi briefly considered leaving the dog to its fate, or even putting it out of its misery, but knew that Lt. Corgi would never forgive her. And even though PT boats were common, even they were irreplaceable.


A low sigh escaped her. "Lead me there."


She couldn't travel too fast, given the flooding she had taken. While not the worst, it still hurt, and it still limited her speed. Atago and the others took up formation, eyes open for Abyssal activity. If there were any left, they likely retreated.


Distressed barking filled the air shortly after, as they saw land and the spotlights of helicopters on the horizon. Their rotorblades faintly echoed in the distance, as Hamakaze radioed in for one. Nachi watched as one broke off its search, spotlight shining brightly across the waves.


The others had their lights on, all pointed towards a single dog. Nachi felt like she was going to hurl. The wounds were very bad, indeed. Sections of its torso were missing, there was blood pooling into the water, and it was clear that unless she did something, the corgi, barely recognizable as a dog to begin with, nevermind a PT boat, was going to slip beneath the waves.


"Nachi?" Isokaze asked. "Do you remember what New Jersey-san did with Heerman?"


Nachi felt herself grit her teeth, but Isokaze had a point, and her damage wasn't too bad. She bent over, cradling the bloody dog in her arms. It was somehow breathing, in spite of the wounds taken. Her eyes tried so desperately to gaze away as she lifted the boat from the water, cradling its body as warm blood began seeping beneath her gloves.


'Deep breaths.' She thought. 'You've seen worse.'


Slowly putting her boilers into action, she began making her way back to shore.


"Dog-actual," she radioed. "This is Nachi. Hostile forces have been sunk or routed, but I have a severely-damaged PT boat in hand, and am requesting a location to drop it off for repairs. How copy?"


Searchlights shone brightly off her, as the rotors of the Blackhawks grew deafening, and the dog's breathing began to slow.

[=]​

Author's Note: Once again, my thanks to @Admiral_Corgi for allowing me to guest write. Suffice to say, while this was a fairly major force (4 DDs, 4 Clemson/Wickes-class DDs converted to minelayers, 2 Brooklyn-class CLs, 1 Northampton, and about 20 E-Boats), there's a reason why Abyssal activity in the Gulf of Mexico, normally a quiet front, is starting to pick up.
 
ah I forgot to post this here. Here's a small preview for the next omake.

...
"William, Dogs from Squadron 5 is saying that Nachi's Approaching PT-41 now." Spoke the rough-edged voice of Gunnery Sergeant Clayton as he held out the handset of the backpack radio for his CO and Lifelong friend to take.

William took the Handset from Clayton and brought it to his ear with a mechanical motion. He hadn't manned Radio since his last Conversation with Nachi a little less than two hours ago. When she had radioed in that one of the minelayers had been sunk and that his PT boats were engaged with Enemy PT boats.

Since then, with Desmond busy communicating with Port Fourchon and the PT Corgis that were sortied out on patrol, other than Squadron 5 who were currently with Nachi's group. William had opted to help his subordinates with preparations to pass the time, at least until word came in that Nachi's group had made contact with Squadron 3. If for nothing else then to steady his nerves, he couldn't just sit around and do nothing but wait.

William wouldn't lie and say he was feeling entirely calm at the moment, he felt like a ball of gasoline soaked nerves. Especially after three members of Squadron 5 had to turn back and return to base due to combat injuries. They were sitting in the repair baths after being treated by Ellen and Sanderson. The Lieutenant steeled himself as he heard the radio crackle to life.

"Dog-actual, This is Nachi. Hostile forces have been sunk or routed, but I have a severely-damaged PT boat in hand, and am requesting a location to drop it off for repairs. How copy?" Came the collected tone of Nachi's voice over the radio.

"Solid Copy Nachi. Proceed to NSA JRB New Orleans at best possible speed. Nachi Be advised. Remaining members of Squadron 5 are carrying extra damage control supplies to assist stabilizing the wounded..." He briefly paused as a small lump formed in his throat before he swallowed it down "until they have returned to base for repairs proper. Dog-Actual out."

Releasing the transmission button and handing the handset back to Clayton. William looked around to his Staff with a stony but determined expression. "Ellen, Banks, Sanderson, Sandbar stow your gear and pack whatever you need. You're taking the Ambulance Humvees to the Naval Air Station. That's where Nachi's taking the wounded."

He watched as the people he called out stopped what they had been doing prior, gave him a quick affirmative before they got ready for departure. Sanderson and Ellen were packing up the medical supplies they had laid out on a folding table for triage. Sandbar and Banks stuck their shovels in the ground and hauled themselves out of the fox hole they were digging.

William looked at his watch to check the time before he looked at his XO. "Clayton, you get the rest of the Day PT Corgis ready for sortie, Night patrols are already heading back to base now. Can you hold the fort down while I get 41 and the others?" He asked his friend. He had lingering uncertainty of heading down with the medical group.

Clayton gave a small smile before he reached out and gave William's shoulder a firm Squeeze. "When have I ever let you down Sir?"

"You never have."

"Then I and everyone else here have things handled." Clayton said before leaning in closer to William with a serious expression on his face "You go ahead and meet them there William. You and I both know those dogs are gonna be scared for their Sister's life. And we both know that between you and me, they always calm down a lot quicker with you. They do consider ya to be a dad to them after all."

After a few moments' thought at the words given to him by his XO, William closed his eyes briefly and nodded. When he opened them again, he made his way to one of the Ambulance Humvees and got into the back...
 
Specs read more like a micro-dred than a smolbat, heavy armor, heavy main battery, and slow
That's exactly what she was, a study by Chief Constructor Admiral David W. Taylor to see if the upward trend in battleship size that was forcing a reduction in the total number of hulls available (particularly if the rumored upcoming tonnage-based naval limitations treaty were signed) could be counteracted by doing a clean-sheet design of a smaller battleship--could the (necessarily less capable) smaller design be enough smaller that it could be built in sufficient numbers to equal the capabilities of the large designs that were the current mainstream, when concentrated into a battle fleet, while also increasing total numbers of ships enough to cover more different stations in peacetime? (The answer, as it turned out, was a resounding "no," and Taylor's experimental study ended up going nowhere except proving that small battleships do not pay.)
 
Omake: Doggos!
Well folks, here's the next part of Doggos. I hope y'all enjoy this. Though don't worry about the series staying dark, it will get a bit more lighthearted. But only after this current arc closes off and the next one starts~

An Office and his Dogs Part 7b: The Toll of War

[=]​
Ten minutes, it had been ten minutes since the last time Lieutenant William Corgi had spoken with Nachi over the radio. Ten minutes since he had told them good hunting, ten minutes he had been waiting in silence. He couldn't take just sitting there and doing nothing anymore.

So William stood up and went to help Clayton check a few squad automatic weapons and bring out boxes of ammo for them from Storage. After the last of the weapons were checked and loaded, the Gunnery sergeant had left the building to go prepare spots for weapon emplacements.

Ensigns Crawford and Jones had returned to the PT Barracks and he wasted no time with putting them to work. Crawford was doing constant updates on rolling map board. Jones meanwhile was aiding Ellen and Sanderson with the preparations to receive wounded.

For all of her antics, PFC Lisa Ellen was nothing but the utmost professional when it came to what her primary job is in his unit. William had seen her carefully packing one of the large rucksacks with nothing but medical equipment and supplies.

When he had asked her about it, she told him that it was in case the situation became such that if they were forced to evacuate. She'd at least be able to treat any of the wounded dogs that they took with them. He wasn't sure whether to be happy to see her have that kind of foresight or nervous because of the implications of it.

Unable to figure out what exactly to feel regarding that, William went outside to check up on Clayton, who he found had taken the backpack radio out of the equipment building and attached the extended range antenna to it. Currently, he saw that the Gunnery Sergeant was helping Sandbar and Banks with setting up sandbag walls and a Machine gun emplacement.

"You need a hand there Gunny?"
"Yeah Lieutenant, we could use some more bags out here. There should be a crate of empty ones in the first floor supply closet, second shelf on the right."

"Got it, I'll be right back." William said as he turned back and walked back into the PT barracks. William made the split-second decision to go check up with Desmond before he got the sandbags from the supply closet. However just as he walked up to the marine, he heard Nachi's voice crackle over the radio on PT boat Frequency.

"Dog-actual, this is Nachi, Enemy minelayer confirmed sunk! Currently engaged with hostile PT boats!"

He could hear the sounds of a fight going on the background. Angry barks and the wall of noise made when the PT Corgi's opened fired with all available weapons. The Lance Corporal handed him the microphone without being even asked to do so. William wasted no time in keying the mic and giving a response.

"Understood, Nachi! Don't let them tear up the dogs!" He said into the microphone, his free hand balled up into a fist. If any of the dogs in Squadron 5 carrying the barrels of extra fuel were hit… 'No. Don't go there. Don't think that goddammit. Just be glad that one of those bastard minelayers got sent to the bottom.' He internally reprimanded himself for thinking the worst, instead of being relieved that one of the abyssal minelayers was out of the picture now.

The Lieutenant handed the microphone back to Desmond and then marched off to retrieve the empty sandbags. Dark thoughts started to bubble up in his mind. He forcibly pushed those thoughts back down and focused on the tasks that needed to be done. He needed to keep himself busy.

"Yeah, that's what I need to do. Just gotta keep myself busy." William quietly said to himself as he located the small crate of empty sandbags, he also spotted a spare shovel next to it. He took both the crate and a spare shovel before heading back out of the building.

When William returned to Clayton, he got started on helping his XO set up defenses.

[=]​

William wiped the sweat from his brow with the back of his hand after he placed the last sandbag down for a Mortar emplacement. Despite how fit he was; the pace Clayton's marines went at when digging fox holes was exhausting. Throw in carrying and then setting up the emplacements that went into each fox hole and William felt more than a tad bit sore.

However before he was about to go grab the Mortar and its munitions, William felt a tap on his shoulder. He looked to his side and saw Clayton looking at him with a Stony expression.

"William, Dogs from Squadron 5 is saying that Nachi's Approaching PT-41 now." Spoke the rough-edged voice of Gunnery Sergeant Clayton as he held out the handset of the backpack radio for his CO and Lifelong friend to take.

William took the Handset from Clayton and brought it to his ear with a mechanical motion. He hadn't manned Radio since his last conversation with Nachi a little less than two hours ago. When she had radioed in that one of the minelayers had been sunk and that his PT boats were engaged with Enemy PT boats.

Since then, with Desmond busy communicating with Port Fourchon and the PT Corgis that were sortied out on patrol, other than Squadron 5 who were currently with Nachi's group. William had opted to help his subordinates with preparations to pass the time, at least until word came in that Nachi's group had made contact with Squadron 3. If for nothing else then to steady his nerves, he couldn't just sit around and do nothing but wait.

William wouldn't lie and say he was feeling entirely calm at the moment, he felt like a ball of gasoline soaked nerves. Especially after three members of Squadron 5 had to turn back and return to base due to combat injuries. They were sitting in the repair baths after being treated by Ellen and Sanderson. The Lieutenant steeled himself as he heard the radio crackle to life.

"Dog-actual, This is Nachi. Hostile forces have been sunk or routed, but I have a severely-damaged PT boat in hand, and am requesting a location to drop it off for repairs. How copy?" Came the collected tone of Nachi's voice over the radio.

"Solid Copy Nachi. Proceed to NSA JRB New Orleans at best possible speed. Nachi Be advised. Remaining members of Squadron 5 are carrying extra damage control supplies to assist stabilizing the wounded..." He briefly paused as a small lump formed in his throat before he swallowed it down "until they have returned to base for repairs proper. Dog-Actual out."

Releasing the transmission button and handing the handset back to Clayton. William looked around to his Staff with a stony but determined expression. "Ellen, Banks, Sanderson, Sandbar stow your gear and pack whatever you need. You're taking the Ambulance Humvees to the Naval Air Station. That's where Nachi's taking the wounded."

He watched as the people he called out stopped what they had been doing prior, gave him a quick affirmative before they got ready for departure. Sanderson and Ellen were packing up the medical supplies they had laid out on a folding table for triage. Sandbar and Banks stuck their shovels in the ground and hauled themselves out of the fox hole they were digging.

William looked at his watch to check the time before he looked at his XO. "Clayton, you get the rest of the Day PT Corgis ready for sortie, Night patrols are already heading back to base now. Can you hold the fort down while I get 41 and the others?" He asked his friend. He had lingering uncertainty of heading down with the medical group.

Clayton gave a small smile before he reached out and gave William's shoulder a firm Squeeze. "When have I ever let you down Sir?"

"You never have."

"Then I and everyone else here have things handled." Clayton said before leaning in closer to William with a serious expression on his face "You go ahead and meet them there William. You and I both know those dogs are gonna be scared for their Sister's life. And we both know that between you and me, they always calm down a lot quicker with you. They do consider ya to be a dad to them after all."

After a few moments' thought at the words given to him by his XO, William closed his eyes briefly and nodded. When he opened them again, he made his way to one of the Ambulance Humvees and got into the back. He saw Ellen in the back, checking over her supplies again. It took William a second to realize it, but he noticed that Ellen had grabbed the rucksack she had prepared earlier.

"Sergeant Banks, Get this Humvee moving." William spoke with an intensity he had seldom used since those early days. The appointed OPS officer's response was to floor the gas. William was prepared for it and so he didn't get thrown. Ellen was prepared for it as well, for when he looked over to her to check on her, she was continuing on with rechecking her rucksack like nothing had happened.

There was a brief pause as Banks stopped at the base gate and informed the Guards of the situation and what he was doing. And then they were off again, though not as quickly as before. Until at least Banks got clear of the crowded city streets. Then Banks floored the gas like his life depended on it.

"Does Sergeant Banks always have this much of a lead foot Lieutenant?" Ellen asked her CO as she felt the Humvee continuing to accelerate. Lisa felt a pull act on her as the Sergeant did a turn at speed. She was scared of the Humvee flipping over but she didn't show it since she was far too busy making sure everything she had brought with her wasn't sent flying around in the back. She looked at the Lieutenant and saw that he had a somewhat apologetic expression on his face.

"Yeah, He was Bradley driver in Afghanistan before he made Sergeant. And before that, he was an amateur race driver. Only time I had ever seen him drive normally was when his girlfriend was in the car with him." The Lieutenant said as the acceleration leveled off.

"Banks has a Girlfriend?" Ellen spoke with clear surprise in her voice.

"He had one."

"What happened to her?"

"She didn't like dogs." William said flatly to Ellen as Banks feathered the breaks before making another turn.

"Rachael was a kind of a bitch anyways. I was just too dumb to have really noticed it until I got assigned to this unit. The Dogs made her show her true colors. Honestly, I'm better off without her anyways." Banks shouted over the roar of the Humvee's engine. After a moment of silence, William thought he heard something over the Humvee's Radio.

"Lieutenant that was Clayton on the radio just now, he said that he contacted the personnel of the Air station. So they know we're coming in hot and they've got the road cleared for us. Clayton also spoke to Nachi, told her that we'd meet her at the Port Ship Belle Chase Pier." Banks hollered as the Humvee slowed down a fair bit as the Sergeant made a one more, rather sharp turn.

William nodded and then tried to listen in as he heard the radio in the cab crackled to life. However he was only able to make out half of what was said and even then he wasn't entirely sure if he had heard it correctly. "Sergeant Banks who was that on the radio just now, I couldn't quite make out what they said."

"That was the Naval Air Station commander; he said he's sending some engineers out to the drop off point with a floating dock so you can get the dogs. Okay we're on the last straightaway; we're roughly three minutes out from the drop off point." Banks shouted as he put the pedal to the metal and sent the Humvee roaring down State highway 23.

The remainder of the ride was a short one, and then came the waiting. Unlike before, there was nothing here for William to do but sit and wait. And so, he waited, first in the Humvee, and then out on the floating dock once the engineers had arrived and set it up before departing once more.

[=]​

William checked his watch, it was almost 0600. Despite the chill of the late December air, he was sweating from the almost maddening anticipation and dread he currently felt. He didn't know exactly how bad PT-41 and the other wounded dogs were and he felt doubt starting to creep up within him. Doubt about whether if they'd be able to save PT-41 or if she'd just pass away before they could get her to the repair docks.

William knew he wasn't alone on the floating dock, Sandbar and Banks were right behind him, ready to help get the wounded out of the water. While Ellen and Sanderson were back at the Humvees, ready to start surgery as soon as the wounded got to them. However, he still felt like he was standing there all by himself. Squeezing his eyes shut for a moment and biting the inside of his left cheek hard enough to draw blood, he managed to dispel the thoughts from his mind.

Not a moment too soon either, for he saw a group of PT Corgis come into view from around the river bend, he recognized that it was Squadron 5, or least part of it. He could see the dogs were scouting ahead, whether if it was from instinct or perhaps they were looking for him specifically. He wasn't sure. When the lead dog of Squadron 5 came close to the floating dock; she looked back behind her and started barking for a few moments before coming right up to the Lieutenant.

William looked down at the PT Corgi and spoke softly. "Hey, can you tell the others that those who've got engine or propeller damage to hop up onto the docks. We've only got two ambulances with us. We'll meet the rest of ya at the repair docks. Okay?" William said to the PT Corgi with some strain in his voice. There was only so much weight those ambulance Humvees could take before something in the suspension broke.

The PT Corgi looked at William and gave him an affirmative bark. William looked up from the PT Corgi as she sped off to tell her sisters and it was then that he saw Nachi come into view from around the river bend. For a brief fleeting moment, he saw the ship instead of the girl. In that moment he saw her damage and while it made him wince. What made him take in a sharp breath was the brief flash of PT-41 he saw as well, resting on Nachi's deck just forward of her main battery. Even from the brief flash he saw, he realized that PT-41 was in bad shape.

Without realizing it right away, William removed his NWU jacket and arranged it to be a makeshift stretcher. He felt a stinging cold in his lower back. It was at that point he fully realized that he had removed his jacket and in the process, accidently lifted the back of his undershirt just enough to expose some of the massive burn scar on the lower third of his back to the chilly December air.

William didn't care about that though. For the moment, he didn't care who even got a fleeting glimpse of the shiny, pitted scar on his back. Where it seemed in places that his skin on that part of his back was translucent or even transparent, showing flesh that had taken on a purple hue from the cold biting air. All he cared about at this moment was doing everything he could to save PT-41. He couldn't allow himself to freeze up; otherwise he was certain PT-41 would die. He had seen enough people die before his eyes to last himself several lifetimes. He wasn't about to let PT-41 die if he had a thing to say about it.

When the Japanese Heavy Cruiser approached the floating dock, William swallowed the lump that formed in his throat and fought back the urge to hurl. He knew PT boats were surprisingly tough, but even he couldn't believe how shot up 41 was. Sections of her nose, torso and even little pieces of the dog's head were just simply gone. He could briefly see through the holes entrails that were a few movements away from spilling out altogether. Yet he could see 41's shallow breaths, his only indication that the dog still lived. A PT Corgi that would still continue to live if he didn't freeze up and did what needed to be done.

When Nachi came to a stop at the floating dock and got ready to hand him PT-41. He reached out and had the heavy cruiser help him wrap the dog in his NWU Jacket before he took PT-41 in his arms. An expression of barely concealed pain played out across his face as he took the nigh-mortally wounded dog into his arms, he thought for just a moment that 41 had died during the handover when he didn't notice a breath from her. Until he felt a small rise come from her chest.

He looked up from PT-41 and into Nachi's eyes as Sandbar and Banks helped the other five badly wounded dogs out of the water. "Thank you Nachi, for bringing them all home… Thank you for bringing my girls home." William whispered to the Heavy cruiser with a mostly thankful tone, though his voice did crack from the flood of emotions that threatening to overwhelm him.

William turned around sharply and began fast walking towards the Humvees. He didn't care whether or not if the Heavy Cruiser or her destroyers saw the twisted gnarled flesh of the scar in the early dawn light. All he cared about was the mangled form of a PT Corgi he was holding in the makeshift stretcher that was his NWU Jacket. As he arrived to the Humvee Ellen was in the back of, William heard and saw the PFC sharply inhale before she sprang into action.

"Ellen, if there's anything I can do to help you…" William trailed off as he got into the back and placed PT-41 on one of the benches that doubled as a compact operating table. It creaked and groaned for a few tense moments but it didn't collapse.

"Yes, put these on and then do as I say, Sir." Ellen said with an even but determined voice as she handed her CO a pair of surgical gloves. As soon as the LT took the gloves from her, she was a blur of motion as she picked various medical supplies and began her work.

"Take this gauze pad here and hold that against that entry wound there." Ellen commanded William, pointing out which entry wound she was speaking about with her pinky finger as she finished setting up most of an IV line. She went to PT-41's intact front leg, took the cordless electric shaver she had brought with her and shaved off a rectangle of fur from around the area of 41's Cephalic vein.

She then took one of the cotton balls she had doused with rubbing Alcohol earlier as she saw the Lieutenant approaching the Humvee. With the soaked cotton balls, Ellen rubbed and wiped off the semi-congealed blood, sweat and other contaminants on 41's skin in that shaved spot. Once that patch of 41's skin was completely clean, she took a catheter and swiftly went through the process of setting it up in the dog and securing it.

As the IV line was connected, Sergeant Banks came up to the Humvee with PT-35 and placed her in the back with William, Ellen and PT-41. "Sir, all remaining mobile dogs are heading back to base, PT's 26, 28 and 42 are riding back to base in Sanderson's Humvee." The appointed operations officer of the unit reported to his CO, who briefly nodded once before the Sergeant closed the doors and went up to get into the driver's seat.

Ellen looked over to PT-35 and quickly assessed where she needed to be wrapped to stem the worst of the bleeding from her partially torn off stern. Ellen then directed William on where to wrap the wounded PT-Corgi with bandages and gauze to slow down her bleeding. Even as she was occupied with trying to cover up or temporarily plug up the worst of the holes in PT-41. Though she did take her time to stitch a few holes closed and pull out a few dozen pieces of shrapnel that were embedded on the surface of 41's skin.

The ride back to base was tense and nearly silent as William and Lisa worked furiously to stabilize their respective dogs. The only sounds were that of the Humvee's engine, and directions from Lisa to William on where to apply a bandage.

[=]​

As the leading Humvee came to a stop just outside of the repair docks building, the doors to the back of the ambulance flew open before two people came out carrying a PT-Corgi each. Heavily wrapped in bandages and covered in already red tainted gauze was PT-41. Still wrapped in the Lieutenant's NWU jacket and being carried by the man himself while Ellen carried PT-35, whose stern was wrapped up in with bandages that had already turned red from the bleeding she had from her wound there. Ellen briefly paused at the doors and turned to face Sergeant Banks as William marched on ahead.

"Banks go help Sandbar and Sanderson with carrying PT-26, 28 and 42 inside." Ellen barked out as before she went into the building with PT-35 in hand just as the second ambulance Humvee pulled up to the building and parked.

Ellen knew that PT-41 was going to need her attention the most out of all of the heavily wounded Corgis. Still though she wasn't quite prepared to see how much 41 had actually bled, by all conventions, 41 should have bled out long before they got to the docks. But she hadn't, even though the small hallway to leading to the repair pool had a trail of fairly sizable blotches of shimmering reddish blood leading to it, no doubt it was what had seeped through the Lt's NWU's and dripped to the floor.

PT-35 whined quietly, which made Ellen stroke the side of the PT Corgi's face with her free hand. "Shhh I know girl, I know. Don't worry, we'll save your sister, I haven't lost any of y'all yet and I sure as hell ain't gonna start now." Lisa said in a comforting tone even as she hurried down the hall and entered the repair pool room.

William was already in the pool, gently moving PT-41 from the makeshift stretcher that was his NWU jacket onto the submerged adjustable operating table. Ellen didn't even bother to try removing her boots as she waded into the pool and placed PT-35 on top of the water. The Dog whined sharply for a moment before making a relieved sound. "Hang tight 35; I have to get working on 41." Lisa said somewhat apologetically to the dog, who responded with a bark that Lisa understood was a clear command of 'Go help her first' from PT-35.

As Ellen moved over to PT-41 to resume the surgery she had started in the back of the Ambulance. Banks, Sanderson and Sandbar arrived with PT's 26, 28 and 42 in hand respectively. As the three men carried their respective PT Corgi to the repair pool, the doors to the room were almost wrenched free from their hinges from the arrival of the remainder of Squadron 3.

As Sanderson directed Sandbar and Banks with treating the other wounded dogs, William watched as Lisa removed some of the gauze and wrappings from PT-41. Already he could see that the water was beginning to heal the severely wounded PT Corgi. However, he also saw that some of the damage was healing back wrong. He noticed Ellen's wince as she saw the damage slowly healing back the wrong way.

"William we're gonna have to…" Lisa started saying but trailed off, he looked at her with icy cold eyes.

"I know, just tell me what I need to get you and what I have to do." William said to her somewhat tersely before she gave him a slightly timid nod.

"I'm gonna need the portable band saw Lieutenant… I don't think I can save these back two legs." Lisa said hesitantly as she removed the bandages covering the mangled legs. She saw that the stumps were stating to regrow, but the flesh was like twisted and gnarled wood at its ragged ends. She adjusted the table upwards, and carefully shifted PT-41 over to the small vice that was bolted onto the table. As gently as she could, Lisa locked one of PT-41's mangled hind legs in the vice. She was about to look up and ask William to hand her the saw when the man all but placed it in her hands for her.

She wordless took the saw and reeved it up. Before bringing it down on PT-41's leg, she saw from the corner of her eyes William moving to comfort the dog as best as he could. Despite everything, she didn't make a single errant movement as she sawed off the mangled flesh despite the dog's sharp yelp of pain.

Wood shavings interspersed with a small amount of metal flecks flew out as the PFC removed the section of leg that was beyond saving. It only took thirty seconds for the first stump to be cut, and then another forty for her to maneuver the other hind leg into the vice, secure it and then cut off the charred splintered wood. Once the task was done, she released the dog from the vice and took in a breath.

"Hand me the cordless Dremel with a sanding drum… and hold her still Lieutenant." Ellen said with a monotone voice, the tool was handed to her a moment later. She then proceeded to sand the cuts smooth, so that when PT-41's hind legs healed, they would heal correctly. Lisa did this work all while doing her absolute best to not let the pained whimpers and yelps coming from PT-41 affect her. She wouldn't and couldn't allow it to affect her ability to do her job right.

It didn't take her long to finish the work on her hind legs, but now came the hardest part, PT-41's right flank. Ellen winced as she looked at the sheared, splintered and burned wood that dominated part of the dog's right side.

Lisa swallowed a lump and knew what needed to be done, she had to open up that part of 41 and remove the charred bits that were on the inside. As she looked to William's eyes, she saw the immense pain they held in their Hazel-Green stare. However, she saw something else smoldering in those orbs, something determined but dark.

She couldn't discern what exactly the other emotion was, but when his eyes glanced up and met hers, she felt a chill of fear run up her spine. For one brief moment in the room's lighting, the Lieutenant's eyes had appeared to turn a pale yellow color. Ellen blinked and William's eyes were their Hazel-Green color once more.

"Ellen…" William started, his voice tense but precise. "I'll do the Debridement on the outside portion; just do what you need to do for her on the inside." He said in a mechanical like manner before taking a small handful of quick-change Dremel bits that Sandbar had retrieved. He then gave them to Ellen, who wasted no time swapping the sanding drum out for a cutoff wheel before she started to cutaway the tattered ruins of the PT-Boat's rigging around her burned and partly ripped open right flank.

William closed his eyes briefly and gently stroked an undamaged part of 41's face, doing his best to comfort her. He saw Sanderson and Sandbar doing their best to help the other dogs, but they didn't have Ellen's experience with doing surgery on animals. The best they could do was clean wounds, remove anything that was burned and pull bullet fragments and shrapnel from locations they could easily see. Or hand him or Ellen the tools they needed, like how Sandbar returned with a pad of course steel wool and handed it to him.

William took the pad and looked at PT-41 once more. "This is gonna hurt girl, but it's so you can heal properly." He whispered to her softly, like a father speaking to his daughter, before he took the pad in one hand and just as Ellen finished cutting off that tattered remains of 41's rigging vest.

He started scrubbing at the charred skin and flesh that was on the outside of the dog's right flank. William's other hand rubbed an intact part of her head. He felt every shudder and twitch from PT-41 travel up both of his arms as he did his work and it took all he had to keep going; to do what needed to be done. It took him a minute to finish removing the charred flesh, leaving raw bloody wood behind. With warm water, Ellen rinsed the spot thoroughly before she prepared to cut into the area around the hole that led to the fire damage on the inside.

A low ragged pained whine slipped past PT-41's mouth as Ellen took the Dremel and started carefully cutting open her right flank. At least the sections of it that hadn't already been torn open from cannon fire. She had to remove a bit more to get full access to the charred part of 41's engine room. After a minute, she had her opening made and what she saw inside when she shined a waterproof flashlight into the cavity almost made her vomit then and there.

Swallowing down the bile that had lept up her throat, Ellen switched out the cutting disk for a stainless steel brush. She glanced up the Lieutenant, who had busied himself with carefully removing even more bullets and shrapnel fragments from the inside of PT-41's destroyed eye. He noticed her stare, and gave her a small nod.


When Lisa brought the rotating brush into contact with the charred parts of 41's engine room, at first 41 didn't react. However, after a second the pain struck the PT Corgi full force. A shrieking yelp of agony flew out of the dog as the PFC methodically scrapped off the charred sections of her Engine room.

It took Lisa Ellen ten minutes; ten whole minutes to finish the Debridement of PT-41's fire damaged Engine room. Ten minutes where she had to hear the PT-Corgi whine, shriek and whimper with pain as she scoured the charred sections away. Rinse and flush the cavity with fresh water, inspect it, and then go back with the Dremel to scour off any char she had missed in a prior pass.

The PFC had to make six such passes before she was certain she had gotten it all. She then stuffed the slowly bleeding cavity with gauze to keep undamaged sections of 41's organs in place before she tapped an extra-large gauze pad over the hole. There wasn't any other way she could have closed the wound. With that bit of surgery done, she lowered the operating table into the water until PT-41 was partially submerged in the healing waters.

Lieutenant Corgi picked up his ruined NWU jacket that had tossed aside after he had placed PT-41 on the operating table. Folding the jacket up into a makeshift pillow, he carefully lifted 41's head up and placed the garment underneath before gently setting her head back down. The PT Corgi made a sound that sounded like a relived sigh and then passed out as the healing waters began to do their work on her badly battered body.

"William I'll still need to do more surgery on 41 to get everything… but she's no longer at any immediate threat of dying. I have to get to the others…" Ellen said, trailing off slightly. She didn't know how exactly her CO would take her statement. The marine flinched ever so slightly when her CO looked up at her.

"Do what you have to, I'm here to help. Sandbar, Sanderson, thank you both for your help but I think you two need to head back to the Barracks building, unless Ellen still needs your help with treating the wounded." William said in a tired voice. He looked over to Ellen, who shook her head.

"Though I'll still need you here Lieutenant," She briefly looked at the rest of Squadron 3, "Because I'm almost certain these girls aren't gonna sit still and make my job easy unless their dad is here with them." She said in a quiet, faintly upbeat voice. The Lieutenant looked at her with a mixed expression on his face for a few moments before a faint ghost of a smile crossed his face. A bit of life returned to his otherwise dulled eyes.

"Alright Lisa, I'll stay and help ya with them." William said as he looked over the other PT Corgis of squadron 3 and noticed the happy body language they displayed. As Sandbar, Banks and Sanderson left the room; Ellen directed the Lieutenant with what needed to be done on the rest of the wounded dogs.

[=]​

Twelve hours later, they were done with the last of the surgeries.

All the shrapnel and bullets had been pulled from the PT Corgis of squadron 3; every hole was either closed up or covered up with bandages. William Corgi felt tired. He felt beyond tired no doubt because of how little sleep he had before everything occurred. He was still at the repair docks, cleaning up things after Lisa had departed. He had told her to get something to eat and get much needed rest.

As much as it had pained him to see some of the Dogs lose legs, he knew it had affected Ellen worse, even if she hadn't shown a single sign of it until after she was completely done putting the wounded back together again.

His eyes drifted over to PT-41, still wrapped up and covered in bandages and gauze, but she was half floating on the water's surface. Four additional rounds of surgery were needed to get her to this current state. He knew that she'd heal up, but even with the ease of repairing PT boats, she'd be dock bound for at least a few days, at most an entire week.

All the other wounded members of squadron 3 would come out of the docks before PT-41 did. Though William knew that unless he specifically ordered them to do so; some if not all of the other 11 members of squadron 3 would refuse to leave the repair baths until PT-41 came was done healing and ready to get out. While William wouldn't dare leave PT-41 alone in the repair pools, he knew that he could just let all the members of Squadron 3 stay at the docks.

They didn't have enough surface assets for him to do that and not jeopardize the patrol screen. It was going to be bad enough that he'd have to have a few squadrons pull double shifts. And it'll also be a headache to rotate the squadrons to pull double shifts until enough of Squadron 3 was fully healed so they could resume their night patrols, if a bit in a reduced capacity.

William rubbed his temples as thoughts of all the things he'd need to do in the near future and addition to his lack of sleep brought forth an almost unbearable headache. Tossing away the last of the torn open packages of bandages and gauze, he picked up his soggy, stained NWU jacket. Looking at the garment for a few moments, he knew he would never get the stains out, and even if he could get them out. He still wouldn't wear it ever again; he didn't want the reminder of how close he had come to Losing PT-41.

Besides, the Jacket was from when he had initially returned to active duty after spending a few months at a desk job after recovering from the injuries he had sustained from that fourth bloody day of that awful week. It was at least one and a half sizes too big on him now compared to how he was when he came out of doing a desk job. It also stank of blood and faintly of high octane gasoline, so that was just even more reason to not keep it. Besides, he figured he was well overdue on getting a new set of uniforms. Even if it meant adding just a tiny bit more to the mountain of paperwork he knew he was going to have to do.

Tossing the garment into the garbage can, the Lieutenant started to make his way out of the room. However, he halted in his tracks when a single almost unnoticeable whine echoed out. He turned around and saw PT-41 raising her head as far above the water as she could. The dog's mouth slightly opened up again and another whine escaped the PT Corgi.

His eyes widened as he understood exactly what she was conveying with that whine. She was asking him to not leave her, at least not yet. William stood there for a moment, unsure what course of action to take. However, that indecisiveness lasted only for a brief moment before he walked over to the repair pool before stepping in. There was a stool in the water by the pool's wall, one Ellen had been using when she was busy doing surgery and needed to be seated.

Sitting down on the stool and letting his back be mostly supported by the wall, William was a little more than halfway submerged in his seated position. The location of the stool placed him next to the severely wounded but now slowly recovering PT Corgi. He heard another small whine come from the dog and realized that she wanted to be in his lap, which was submerged but not deeply so. He even saw that she was trying to move herself into his lap!

"41, you know Ellen said you shouldn't be moving around too much. Stay still girl." William softly admonished the PT Corgi. Though his words didn't hold any real bite to them, he still worried about her reopening some of the wounds he and Ellen had worked hard on closing.

Reaching over to her with both hands, William very carefully moved PT-41 into his submerged lap. The PT Corgi almost immediately relaxed against him, her head resting against the arm he held under her head to support it. His free hand gently stroked the undamaged parts of her back and face. The Dog lightly nuzzled her face against the cotton of his undershirt as he spoke almost inaudible words of comfort to the dog.

William was so focused on watching 41's breathing fall back to regular if a bit sedated pattern, that he hadn't noticed the other members of Squadron 3 gathering around him until he felt a snout poke his left side. Blinking twice at the touch, he looked over and saw that it was PT-34 coming up to rest against him. He then looked around and saw that all the members of Squadron 3 were gathering around him and PT-41. Though they did give their severely injured sister the space she needed. They still crowed around the two of them in a group hug. Or at least the closest thing to one that PT Corgis could manage.

The Lieutenant blinked again when he felt the impact and then tug of small anchors on his pant legs. A small gentle smile spread across his face. He felt completely utterly spent, but he felt oddly comfortable. The lure of sleep was simply too great for him to try resisting it anymore. So he slowly closed his eyes. Almost right away he was somewhere between being awake and being asleep.

In his mind he wasn't sitting a little past his belly button in the warm waters of the repair bath, surrounded by 11 PT Corgis with one heavily bandaged one in his lap. Instead in the Lieutenant's mind, he was sitting on a soft sofa in a warm living room.

Surrounded on either side by a total of eleven little girls that looked like identical sisters save for the small differences between them, some of them were lightly bandaged up, others more so and two were completely unblemished. All of them however, were hugging him and the twelfth girl that was resting in his lap. She was heavily bandaged and wrapped in a soft blanket, breathing slowly but steadily. She was held steady in his lap with his left arm while his free hand gently tussled her hair.

"It'll be alright girls." William murmured softly in both his dream and in the real world. "Everything's going to be alright my precious little girls. I'm here for you. Dad's here for you." Lieutenant Corgi murmured quietly as he and the PT Corgis of Squadron 3, drifted off to sleep together.

[=]​
 
Last edited:
PFC Lisa Ellen was nothing but the upmost professional when it came to
utmost
He hadn't manned Radio since his last Conversation with Nachi
Unnecessary capitalization
Ellen was prepared for it as well, for when he looked over to her to check on her.-

-She was continuing on rechecking her rucksack like nothing had happened.+ There was a brief pause as Banks stopped
The dashes mark where the sentence should continue with a comma. The plus marks a better paragraph break location.
 
> Waiting for my flight
> Hit bar.
> Am semi drunk now
> They had some good booze
> Oh god.
> My head is full of poi.
> This is bad.
> Ack!
> I've twice now used poi in conversation with strangers.
> I BLAME MY BROTHER AND THAT DAMN POI SOUNDBOARD OF HIS
> The worst part is.
> THEY KNEW
> They knew the meme.
> L
> The second stranger actually said nanodesu
> [...]
> Slipped the pilot a $10 and asked him to say poi during preflight announcements And he did like a fucking natural at it
> Landed. Still pulling up to the terminal
> And he said poi again
> I wish I had recorded it. But this southwestern pilot must be some kind of weeb...
> Or he follows BB because he just mentioned the coffee fairy
[...]
 
> Waiting for my flight
> Hit bar.
> Am semi drunk now
> They had some good booze
> Oh god.
> My head is full of poi.
> This is bad.
> Ack!
> I've twice now used poi in conversation with strangers.
> I BLAME MY BROTHER AND THAT DAMN POI SOUNDBOARD OF HIS
> The worst part is.
> THEY KNEW
> They knew the meme.
> L
> The second stranger actually said nanodesu
> [...]
> Slipped the pilot a $10 and asked him to say poi during preflight announcements And he did like a fucking natural at it
> Landed. Still pulling up to the terminal
> And he said poi again
> I wish I had recorded it. But this southwestern pilot must be some kind of weeb...
> Or he follows BB because he just mentioned the coffee fairy
[...]
This honestly sounds way more interesting than what happens in my own discords...........
 
Omake: Hunt for Graf Spee
The Hunt for the Abyssal Graf Spee
Part 9


The Hunter lingered amongst the ice, licking her wounds. The human's pets had injured her during her retreat. A smokestack riddled with shrapnel, and a dent in her flank were the greatest extent of her wounds, and she had inflicted much more upon the twice damned shipgirls.

One sinking, surely sunk by now, and another gravely injured by a torpedo she had loosed under cover of the storm. Both worthy prey whose deaths she would have savored to conduct at close range. She longed to tear them limb from limb, to suck the marrow from their bones, in turn only strengthening herself.

But her victory had come at a great cost. Perhaps a crippling cost. The tanker upon which she had relied for sustenance had been attacked and sunk. The precious supplies that it carried were lost back to the sea.

She would have to attack more. Raid more convoys, get more supplies. Take enough to survive until the next convoy. Assuming that she would last that long.

The Hunter's belly growled.

Another unsuccessful hunt had emptied her bunkers, and she had been returning to the tanker for resupply when the human pets attacked.

But perhaps the schiffsmädchen would be a solution to the problem they caused her.

Warships carried less supplies than a tanker, but the Hunter lacked the space to store the full haul she could take from a tanker. A heavy cruiser that was only slightly smaller than herself?

It might just be the perfect prey to suit her needs.



The Hunter scowled to herself as she drew nearer to her prey. A floatplane scout had reported that the heavy cruiser indeed still floated, though it remained in place, only shifted slightly by the waves. The two light cruisers circled the immobile and unconscious schiffsmädchen, on high alert.

They would prove inconsequential, and only increase the joy that she got from her hunt.

Against light cruisers, she held every advantage. She vastly outranged them, their firepower was like a snowball to compared to her. Even her armor, inadequate though it may be, greatly outclassed theirs.

Then, with the escort destroyed, she would be free to feast upon the prey which she had rightfully brought down earlier. The heavy cruiser, who felt oddly familiar, would provide the sustenance that she needed to survive til the humans sent their next convoy.

Perhaps the sinking of three cruisers would grant her a new escort to replace those lost earlier in the conflict.

She was nearing maximum firing range upon the shipgirls now. It would be a waste to open fire at this range, but she would be upon her prey soon enough.

The floatplane circling the schiffsmädchen gave a hasty and panicked alert. Planes passing over the location of the defenders. Heading towards the Hunter herself.

The Hunter swore violently to herself. Something must have spotted her on her way in. It hadn't been the aerial aircraft carriers who tormented the U-boat fleets of the Abyss. She knew both of their locations, and neither was in a position to track her, let alone spot her.

What had been her mistake?

Where had she gone wrong?

This line of questioning was brought to a close when her floatplane reported that the aircraft were now circling protectively over her prey.

Like a mother protecting her young, the carrier had committed to protecting the wounded cruisers. If the Hunter had any companions, she would direct them to attack the carrier now, while it was most vulnerable.

Objectives could change rapidly upon new information, but only if she had the ability to act upon this new information. And she did not.

Instead, her main objective was that much harder. Instead of two woefully unprepared cruisers, she would need to force her way through at least a deadly wave of carrier aircraft before she could even begin her assault.

A quick tally of her remaining supplies showed that this was her only option.

She did not have the capability of running and hiding. She did not have an island base to hide away on, saving precious supplies for when she put to sea to hunt the humans.

Either she would perish here, taking as many schiffsmädchen as she could with her, or she would succeed, and become all the more dangerous to the humans for her continued survival.

The odds were not fully stacked against her. A single wave of attack aircraft was survivable. Two light cruisers were easily killable for a ship with her capabilities.

A tantalizingly necessary prey awaited her success.

The assault would have to happen now, while her enemy was still near and weak. Any further delay could mean that instead of assured victory, her fate would be to fade away. A ghost ship, cast of Abyssal steel.

A waste.

She would not become a waste.

Her floatplane reported that it had been detected. She ordered it to ram itself into the wounded light cruiser. Any further damage it could inflict would be less time spent disabling and sinking the schiffsmädchen.

Her pace was tantalizingly slow as she neared optimal range to open fire. The patrolling aircraft had taken notice of her by now, and the strike craft were closing in.

The torpedo bombers came first, low and slow. Ancient, decrepit biplanes, flying in formation. Easy prey for her AA gunners.

None of the bombers fell to her flak, and all released their payload and pulled off. The Hunter heaved towards the bombers, desperately trying to thread the needle between torpedoes.

She took no hits.

Her maneuvering had taken her straight into the path of the incoming dive bombers. Their dive was eerily silent, lacking the comforting sounds of the Jericho trumpets mounted by some of her Abyssal compatriots.

Instead, the dive bombers screamed down towards her, the only sounds being her frantic AA gunners, and the propellers and rattling airframes of the bombers. One plane began smoking, and fell out of formation.

The Hunter did not bother to watch it splash down into the water, for the incoming bombs were much more important. Four bombs impacted the seas around her, sending water over her decks and drenching corrupted crewmen. One landed amidships, near where a shell had hit the previous day.

She screamed in pain as the bomb burst. Shrapnel shredded her smokestack and other parts of her superstructure, while wooden decking caught fire and grew to a roaring blaze.

That pained scream was the last action the Abyssal Graf Spee ever took. She never saw the fifteen inch shells fired from well beyond the horizon. The pain of the fires temporarily masked the sharp but subtle pain of a shell punching through her decks.

She did not live long enough to feel the pain of her forward magazine brewing up and tearing her asunder.

By the time the column of smoke and debris had faded, the Abyssal Graf Spee had fully slipped below the waves.
 
This honestly sounds way more interesting than what happens in my own discords...........

Semi-drunk or Full Drunk me in public usually causes many funny things to happen.

This is was just Semi-drunk me, and through a spur of the moment act, I learned that there is a Southwestern pilot out there that reads Belbat. Because he knew the memes.
 
Omake: Hunt for Graf Spee
The Hunt for the Abyssal Graf Spee
Part 10


Exeter's eyes fluttered open, her sleep disturbed by the sound soft crashing waves. She was in a pool, with the water lapping at her hull. Off-white and blue tiles littered the walls of the building she was in, and the scent of chlorinated water stung at her nose.

"Hey you, you're finally awake." Huh? That voice sounded familiar. "You were trying to cross the border right? Walked right into that Abyssal ambush same as us and that thief over there."

The heavy cruiser's eyes focused as she turned her attention towards the only other occupant of the building. "Achilles?"

"The one and only!" The ginger light cruiser cheered.

"What are you on about?"

"It's a video game reference! I doubt you'd get it."

"Why make a reference if I wouldn't get it?"

"Because it amused me?" Achilles offered with a shrug.

Exeter just sighed. "How long have I been out?"

"You were out for three days. Best estimates put you at another week's worth of repair time before we can head back to the Home Isles."

"Lovely. I don't suppose you could acquire some entertainment for me?"

"Sure thing! I can probably get you something by sunrise if I can get help from a couple of the local subs."

"I didn't know there were submarines here. You'd think the blimps would scare them all off."

"The American subs just see it as a challenge."

"Bloody Yanks…" Exeter groaned, slipping a little deeper into the comfortably warm waters of the repair bath.



The next morning, Exeter found that Achilles had lived up to her word. A gaming console, an Xbox, had been left by her side sometime while she rested. The thing only had one game, much to Exeter's consternation. After a few hours of patient disregard of not having any choices, the heavy cruiser relented and tried this "Skyrim" game.

That initial trial was all Exeter needed to get hooked. For the next few days, while she was still confined to the repair baths, it was an uphill battle to get Exeter to turn away from the TV screen, and the adventures of her "Nord" character named "Prisoner."

Of course, that doesn't mean it wasn't possible for that to happen.



The briefing room was quiet when Exeter entered it. Achilles and Leander were both seated near the entrance, while Admiral Carraway stood in his usual position near the display.

"Thank you for managing to pull yourself from the repair baths, Exeter." Carraway began. "I don't know how much you've heard from Leander and Achilles over the past day, so I'll start from the beginning."

Exeter nodded, and quickly took a seat. The hard plastic hit a sore spot where Exeter's side had been torn open by one of the Abyssal's shells, and she winced.

"A week ago, the three of you were sent out to search and destroy an Abyssal tanker, which we believe was providing fuel and munitions for the Abyssal Graf Spee and whatever other Abyssals might have been in the area. You successfully found this tanker, and engaged it. Part way through the engagement, the Abyssal Graf Spee revealed itself and engaged your squadron. Leander successfully destroyed the tanker, while Exeter and Achilles engaged the Graf Spee. Over the course of the next forty-five minutes, Exeter and Achilles duelled the Graf Spee. Exeter was critically wounded during this time, and the Graf Spee pulled back soon after. A spread of torpedoes was launched at allied forces, but nobody took any hits.

"Contact was lost with the Abyssal Graf Spee after it pulled away, until it returned the next day. We have no idea as to its intent for returning, as air attacks from HMS Formidable and long range gunnery from HMS Renown destroyed it before it could engage any allied forces. As of this moment, the Hunt for the Abyssal Graf Spee is over. You will all return to the UK as soon as Exeter has completed the necessary repairs."

The three cruisers cheered. They had succeeded.

"You are all dismissed. Achilles, if you'd stay a moment, there's a situation developing further inland that your unique temperament might be useful for."

"Right!" Achilles said, waving to Exeter and Leander as they left.



The week of waiting for repairs passed fairly quickly. Leander got shanghaied into helping wrangle destroyers, and Achilles disappeared for a few days with no contact. Exeter wasn't quite sure where Achilles disappeared to, or what it was about, and the light cruiser gave no indication that her disappearance had affected her at all.

As soon as Exeter was fully repaired, the three British cruisers set off, back to Great Britain. Travel was swift and quiet. No U-boats reported along their route, no winter storms hiding murderous Abyssals. Just the North Atlantic waters lapping at the hulls of a squadron of cruisers.

To Exeter, it felt like the calm after a storm had passed.



"Okay, put on your best smiles everyone! We're finally home!" Achilles cheered as the cruisers pulled into Portsmouth. A small group awaited them on the pier.

The first familiar face to greet them was Intrepid rushing out onto the water to embrace Exeter in a full blown tacklehug that would have bowled the heavy cruiser over had she not displaced six times the destroyer's mass.

Instead, Exeter lifted Intrepid into a full blown hug. A genuine smile graced her features in way that hadn't happened since well before this whole debacle had started.

Even with the tears in her eyes, Exeter couldn't help but watch the rest of the small crowd. Achilles had surged forward, and was currently waving her arms at some young lad who Exeter didn;'t recognize. The man waved his arms back, and the two embraced in a hug. Leander was the only arrival to give Admiral Stearns the proper respect he deserved with a salute.

At the back of the crowd, Dreadnought and a new battleship watched and smiled. Exeter's emerald eyes met the unknown battleship's scarlet eyes, and an image layered itself over the heavy cruiser's vision. A battleship she might have served alongside in the Pacific had she not been sunk by Japanese planes appeared before Exeter's eyes, before fading back to the crowd.

The Prince of Wales was back as the Royal Navy's first modern fast battleship to return.

Perhaps things would start to look up again.

~FIN~​

Epilogue:

Exeter took a moment to admire the decorations that Kaidan had set up for the roast dinner he had promised. She was sitting in one of the chairs that he had apparently upholstered himself (with help from his mother), and her boyfriend was currently pulling the roast from the oven.

Candles lit the dinner table, where the roasted potatoes and green beans were already waiting. She had already sampled one of the small potatoes, and found their seasoning to be exquisite.

Kaidan emerged from the kitchen not with a roast like she expected, but a small box. Exeter's heart soared.

"Exeter, I won't get down on one knee to ask you to marry me. I won't do that until this war is won and we can move to a peaceful life together. But I made you a ring anyway."

He opened the box to reveal a simple steel band, with a faint engraving on the outside. "Consider this ring a Promise. A Promise that I will be there for you, through all of the trials this war may yet bring. A Promise that I will never leave you. And a Promise that as soon as this war is declared done, I will meet you at the altar and marry you."

Exeter's hand raised to cover her mouth. "Kaidan?" She couldn't believe he was doing this. Never in her happiest dreams did she even consider something like this.

"That is my Promise to you. And, I know how fragile limbs can be in combat, so I also had a chain made. That way, my Promise can always be close to your heart."
 
Prince of Wales is back...will we see a reunion between her and Hood, and will Hood tell her of the Abyssal adventures of their former Denmark Strait foe?
 
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