This story took place in Vietnam, but it's about any violent
conflict. And it's not about me, it's about the very real nightmares we
can find ourselves living if we don't reason things out for ourselves, and
continue to let movies, television, and the violent fantasies of others do
our thinking for us.
For the year I was there, my job mostly consisted of driving a
truck and slinging sandbags. No close friends died and I never killed
anyone. There is still a feeling of guilt for not having suffered
"enough" even though what I experienced puts me through almost
overwhelming grief sometimes for the people involved in what I saw. It's
senseless, but it's almost as if by having more pain I could somehow
lessen the pain of others carrying horrors that would make my memories
seem like welcome relief to them. There were some who went through much
more, and some who went through much less, but in the end what matters is
that we try to learn from all our experiences and then use them to benefit
ourselves and others.
At times I'm filled with anger and resentment for the
stupidity and gullibility of a major part of the human race. The vast
ocean of shallow, psychotically romantic hype fodder called humanity that
doesn't have the sense to see the reality of pain, grief, and horror of
war and death. Even those are all just words that don't begin to convey
the convoluted tangle of feelings involved. Then I remember that if I'd
known then what I know now, I'd never have gone to that miserable place
myself. But I didn't know. I couldn't have known what is so obvious to
me now until after the experience. I don't mean to imply that I think the
world could destroy all its weapons and then everything would be
paradise. Evil is a very real thing and sometimes must be fought. I
doubt for example that a loving note to Hitler would have changed the fate
of six million Jews, or that the genocide of millions of Muslims,
Christians, Hindus, Buddhists and others occurring throughout history
would not have happened with merely a display of love and kindness on the
part of the chosen targets. The list of both murderers and victims is
endless and excludes no race, religion, or political ideology. But "the
young want to die nobly, the wise, to live humbly". Evil takes many
forms, and one of them is the willingness of governments, religions,
businesses, and individuals to corrupt and steer youthful naiveté,
exuberance, and strength toward terrible destruction because of petty
dedication to their own purposes, no matter what the cost, as long as the
cost doesn't seem to be directly their own.
I'd only been in country for a few weeks when a couple of guys
and I went into the village of Duc Pho to get haircuts. We were excited
and sort of mesmerized by the fact that we were actually in a tropical
country, in a war, and all on our own. Sort of like going to Disneyland
for the first time and finding a sign inside warning "assassins in the
park, enter at your own risk." We walked into the town orphanage which
was a small, high walled schoolyard with a large rambling building inside
where the barber was located.
I sat down in a rickety chair, laid my rifle up against the
wall next to me, and the barber began cutting my hair. Suddenly he jumped
aside as another Vietnamese grabbed my rifle, jacked a round into the
chamber, put the muzzle inches from my nose and shouted "NOBODY MOVE!" My
friends could do nothing. As he glared at me over the top of the sights,
I clearly realized that my time on earth was over, that I was a dead man.
I remember being suddenly sick with sadness for myself, and thinking that
it wasn't fair. It just really wasn't fair at all! We looked at each
other for what seemed forever, and then he smiled. He said "Everything
OK, no problem, nobody shoot!" Then he lowered my rifle, handing it to
me, and said sternly "You no do! You no leave weapon alone, ever! No do
ever, or you maybe die!" He was in civilian clothes, but turned out to be
an officer in the South Vietnamese Army. It may come as no surprise that
I always remembered what he said, and especially the way he said it. For
the first time I realized that it was no game, it was all too real.
Nothing and nobody can save me if I get careless. Whatever our age,
childhood is over the day we lose that sense of immortality, and it never
comes back. It's odd how sure we are that we're aware of everything,
until we suddenly get shocked into the reality of how little we actually
perceive.
One night I was sitting in a bunker watching a battery of
105mm Howitzers during a fire mission. They were about 100 yards away and
firing right over a group of huge boulders that had a bunker sitting on
top which was in a perfect spot to watch the perimeter. As they fired
again, an unexpected flash and boom split the night, and a billowing
mushroom of smoke and dust shot from the bunker on the rocks. Somehow a
round had been fired point blank into the bunker from one of the cannons.
We didn't know whether anyone was in the bunker or not until a minute
later when the most agonized, piercing, terrified scream I'd ever heard
cut through the dead silence that followed the explosion. At least one
man, no doubt badly wounded, was buried in the collapsed bunker. For a
while there was horrifying silence, then another awful, long, anguished
scream. Then silence. Then another scream, then whimpering. This went
on for what seemed like a couple of hours, although I doubt it was
actually that long, with the sounds slowly growing weaker until they
either got him out, or he passed out, or died. We never knew which it
was.
We'd just crawled into our cots after another exhausting day
of digging holes and filling sandbags (we usually called them mudbags for
good reason) when a series of jarring explosions put us on our feet
grabbing for boots, rifles, ammo, and set us running from our tents to the
bunkers. I'd only been in country for a short while and other than a few
incoming mortar rounds, nothing much had happened in that time. As I ran
out of the tent more explosions went off, and then I saw something that
still sends chills up my spine. The bunker out on the perimeter in front
of me, full of guys in my company, was exploding with huge sprays of
sparkling fire jetting from the door and windows, and everyone was running
for cover in total confusion.
We grouped up and formed a secondary perimeter behind any
cover we could find, but the attack was over as quickly as it had begun
and then the cleaning up began. Luckily I didn't have to pull the dead
and wounded out of the bunkers, but was in one of them moments later to
replace the guys they had hauled out. The dirt floors of the bunkers had
been drenched in blood and it created patches of gooey mud with a chilling
odor. The sandbags and wooden bracing had been blown apart, and my fear
was more that it would all collapse and bury us than that the VC would
attack again. But the rest of the night while very scary, was uneventful.
We saw what had happened the next day. The VC had crawled
across rice paddies in front of us, crept in through concertina wire, trip
flares, and claymore mines, jacked apart some metal bars covering a
drainpipe, using the pipe to crawl under a dirt road, and crawled up and
down a weed filled ditch behind seven or eight bunkers full of wide awake
men on a moonlit night. They then simultaneously began throwing three and
four satchel charges into each bunker and as the charges exploded made a
quick and clean escape. But that wasn't the end of it. After a couple of
days in the high heat and humidity, the blood saturated dirt began to
rot. For the next couple of months while we were in the area we had to
sit in those damaged bunkers at night surrounded by the overpowering
stench of rot and death. Several times as we were heading to the
perimeter to pull guard duty we were told that intelligence had been
received that we should expect a massive offensive with the possibility of
being overrun by a "human wave" attack. That didn’t happen or I wouldn’t
be writing this. But add up the horror of that smell with the fear of the
attack and you have nights guaranteed to last your nerves the rest of
your life whether anything happened or not.
I slammed the shift into a higher gear, bouncing and laughing
with my "shotgun" rider and flying down the road toward somewhere. It
didn't really matter where, we just hoped we could find some cold beer and
a safe place to sleep. As we barreled through villages we could tell how
the people there felt about things. If they smiled and waved they were
friendlies. If they frowned and threw rocks they were VC, or VC
sympathizers. Hopefully all we would get was a dent or two from rocks.
It could always be worse.
We usually drove in convoys. Long lines of trucks sometimes
joined by tanks or armored personnel carriers for protection. Every so
often a helicopter gunship would scream low overhead with a deafening roar
as it patrolled the roads, guarding the convoys and looking for a little
something to do. Like unleashing the unbelievable firepower they carried
in the form of rockets, grenade launchers, and most impressive to me,
miniguns, which were super machine guns with firing rates so high that
when they went off all you saw was unbroken red lines of tracers and all
you heard was a continuous burp so loud your ears would ring for quite
awhile if they were close enough. At the other end of all that was hell
on earth. Hauling ass down a road in a truck with an M16 at your side and
gunships and tanks around, or sitting in a bunker surrounded by a
considerable selection of deadly weapons could make you feel powerful and
invincible at times. That was a very welcome fantasy. Most of the time I
had the much more realistic and stressful awareness that I was in a very
dangerous place, and if it was my turn to get it, no attitude or weapon in
the world would save me. But the attitude was also valuable. We had to
try to convince ourselves that we were dangerous too, and anyone with a
gun really can be. Sometimes feeling that way was the only way people
stayed sane, but it's an exhausting way to live.
The bunker was ready for the night. The machine gun, claymore
mines, grenade launcher, hand grenades, ammo and flares were all laid out
and ready to go. The four of us were sitting back in the relative
coolness of the early evening, watchful, but just talking and relaxing
after a long hard day. We'd been attacked the week before and lost a lot
of men, so tension and emotions were high and any relief no matter how
short was very welcome. Our shifts of staying awake all through the night
on guard would start soon enough. This was the best time of the day. I
felt lazy and comfortable just talking with friends.
Then one of them got an idea. "Lets shoot a few flares into
the village. That'll wake 'em up!" I was always uncomfortable around
that sort of thing, but what the hell, we shot them at each other now and
then as a sort of sick joke. Why should the villagers be exempt? The
instigator cut off the little parachute attached to the flare so that it
would really fly, and smacked the cap to launch it toward the houses a few
hundred yards away. Much to our surprise, he actually hit a house, and in
no time at all quite a little fire was in progress on the roof. A crowd
of villagers quickly gathered, running and yelling and trying to put out
the fire. I felt kind of guilty, but couldn't help but laugh a little as
my buddy did a little victory dance and whooped it up. I don't know when
it all really started, but what had begun as a little joke soon became
something else.
We were inside a bunker which is a tiny building built of
sandbags, with its confinement able to amplify gunfire into hammering
explosions inside that could actually be felt as concussions in your
body. What had been a relaxing, friendly evening abruptly turned into a
horrifying nightmare as without warning the machine gun went off, quickly
followed by an M16 on full auto, and the hollow "thunk" of the grenade
launcher, all accompanied by bright flashes and unbelievable noise. While
I had been sitting by the back door, my buddies had begun a killing frenzy
up front, and as I looked up I saw a vision straight out of Hell. As I
write this it seems almost like a joke to try to describe those emotions
and perceptions with words. That's something that could never be done.
As I realized what I was seeing, I remember bringing up my
rifle with a raging elation, and a desire to join in and KILL THE DIRTY
BASTARDS! As quickly as the feeling came it disappeared, thank God,
before I pulled the trigger. And I have thanked God thousands of times
since that night. The rage was replaced with a terrified, paralyzing
fascination while tracers ripped into the crowd, grenades exploded around
them, and horrible shrieks, screams, and cries of agony from the wounded
and dying men, women, and oh my God, children bored into my brain and
scorched out gaping wounds which will never, ever, ever be gone from my
memory.
All of a sudden the firing stopped with a shocking silence.
And then even with gunfire deadened ears, the sounds of wounded and dying
human beings cut through the night air in a crystal clear, sickening
wail. I just stood there in a stupor unable to move or think a coherent
thought for what seemed like a long time. What happened the rest of that
night is gone from my memory. Thank you God.
The story was told of VC being shot at, and the casualties
were blamed on the village being too close to our perimeter bunkers. The
story worked just fine for the record. But we knew. And so did they.
The next day the village showed up in all its funerary
finery. Led by the elders, the people held a procession by the bunker
that had, in just a few sickening moments, destroyed so many people. So
many precious, irreplaceable lives and stories. They were dressed in
beautiful, richly colored silks that flowed around them in the breeze.
They carried many festive, brightly colored caskets on their shoulders.
Red, gold, blue, green, yellow. The whole thing was unreal in its color,
beauty, and dignity. The bright sunlight shone down on this dream and
made me wonder if it was all real.
And then I noticed how small some of the caskets were. They
were too small for a real person. Why was that? Oh! They weren't too
small! They were for the children! I remember feeling rather clever that
I'd figured it out. So very clever, until my mind couldn't bullshit me
any more. Until the whole reality hit me. Then, even though I hadn't
done anything, the knowledge of what I'd seen, and of how close I'd come
to being a monster out of my nightmares kicked me into a place I wouldn't
be able to leave for a long, long time. Although not the only reason for
the self destruction to follow, when the walls finally did begin to
crumble so many years later, the process came close to killing me as it
has so many others with the self medication of alcohol and drugs. When I
see scenes on television of people in pain from war or anything else, it's
not just pictures for me.
The people in that village were not saints. Some that died
were quite likely the enemy. But all of them had been living human
beings. And now they were dead and gone forever. Just like the thousands
of young, bright, hopeful Americans and others who made the one way trip
to their doom. All I know is that from that night on my life was never
the same. One of the lessons I learned then is that we may feel that life
is precious, but we are all capable of terrible evil if the time is
right. And that until (God forbid) the time it happens, most of us are
ignorant of it, and would deny it to the grave. Which is probably just as
well. Knowledge like that can be a very heavy burden. Too heavy for the
many who give mute testimony by their choice to be absent from this world.
I sat on a sandbag with a cooling monsoon breeze flowing by
and the fresh smell of growing things perfuming the air. Huge, white,
billowing rain clouds drifted overhead with wide patches of pure blue sky
standing out between them. The village looked like a tropical island in
the rice paddies, with little toy palm frond houses and palm trees
everywhere. It was so beautiful and alive I wanted to cry with
happiness. Villagers walked on the dikes between rice paddies so green
that emeralds look pale in comparison. They talked and laughed among
themselves and I found myself wanting to join them. What a wonderful
place to be, and a beautiful day to be alive. Then I got up, lifting my
rifle, turned around and headed back to the war.
As the truck dropped the six of us off alone on the side of
the mountain near Kontum, I couldn't help but wonder at the insanity that
had put us there. A new firebase would be built here and we had been
"volunteered" to start cutting it out of the jungle with axes and
machetes. Eventually the engineers were brought in with heavy equipment
to really do the job, as there was no way that the amount of growth that
needed to be cleared away could possibly be done by sixty, let alone six
men. As the years have gone by, many mysteries about the happenings in
Vietnam have cleared up for me, but why our lives were risked out there
remains a puzzle.
We decided to check out the trails close by to try to put a
little insurance on our safety while working. None of us were used to any
sort of recon patrol, so we were pretty nervous. It was a good thing we
were walking slowly, because a little way down a trail I suddenly felt my
boot snag a tripwire, and I froze, gritting my teeth, expecting to be
blown up by my blunder. Nothing happened. Afraid to even talk or move, I
quietly called to the guy in front of me to wait up. He turned, puzzled,
and stopped the others. I said "I'm hooked on a trip wire. Try to find
out what this damn thing is!" At that point their eyes got wide, and they
all began backing away from me down the trail. When I realized what they
were doing, I as carefully as possible brought up my rifle and said "You
better get back here and help me quick!" I was too scared to be really
angry, and doubt that I'd have shot anybody, but thank God they didn't
know that. Itchy sweat was pouring down my whole body in that miserable,
scorching humidity, and my muscles were shaking and about to cramp up by
the time they finally found the ends of that wire. When a voice said "No
sweat, it's only a trip flare!" I almost collapsed, puked, and cried all
at once. But of course I only said something like "You assholes better
not punk out on me again like that!" or some such swaggering bullshit. It
was a very good lesson though. You never know what people will really do
until the pressure is on. And that changes from day to day. It was that
way for them, and it's that way for me too. It seems that Vietnam
veterans are all supposed to be brave, dangerous, trained killers, primed
and ready to show the world that they're not to be messed with. I'm sure
that some came back just like that. But training in itself doesn't make
you brave, dangerous, or a killer. I, for one, went to Vietnam not
feeling particularly "brave", and I surely came home with many more fears
than I left with. And I learned that being able to kill someone doesn't
necessarily have anything to do with courage. If you take the goodness
and love out of courage, what remains is merely insanity. Insanity is
nothing to be proud of. I only wish more people knew that.
Garbage detail again. Damn. Oh well, better that than
burning shit. Burning shit was much worse. Our latrines were outhouses
with the bottom half of an oil drum used in place of a hole in the
ground. Disgust and disease prevention demanded that we pull the drums
out, pour diesel fuel into the mess inside, light it up and stand there
stirring it up occasionally to make sure it all burned away. Lots of fun
and fragrant too. Like I said, garbage beat shit any day.
We would load up four or five large metal trash cans brimming
with rotting garbage and trash and heavy enough to need three men to
comfortably lift one high enough to slide into the bed of a truck. Then
we'd drive out of the firebase about a mile to the dump area where a crew
of Vietnamese would be kind enough to unload it for us and put the empty
cans back in the truck. Of course they did get paid. Their pay was that
they got to eat that slimy, stinking, rotting garbage, swarming flies and
all. And that they did, handful over skeletal handful in a horrible,
frantic, disgusting way. These people were starving to death. We'd bring
a little food along to help them, but it didn't make much difference.
There were just too many of them.
As I'd stand there watching all this with a sickened
fascination I'd wonder how they could live like that. They were the
homeless in a place where "homeless" was a deadly serious thing. I came
to the awareness that the reason I was in the truck with a full belly and
a place to sleep, and they were just feet away actually dying of hunger
with no place to go, had nothing to do with deserving anything. It was
fate. Or God's will. Or luck. Whatever you called it, it had little to
do with "fair". There are always those wanting something for nothing, or
feeling that the world owes them something. I'm not speaking of them, and
I certainly don't have all the answers. But years later when I came close
to taking our version of homelessness as my only option to deal with a
life I'd turned into a nightmare, I felt those feelings of frustration
with mankind's selfishness even more. Anyone can end up there. But most
of us have to end up there ourselves, or come very close to it, in order
to see that truth in our hearts. Maybe someday we'll evolve far enough to
feel enough compassion to actually do something about the unnecessary
suffering of a large part of humanity without having to suffer ourselves
to do it. But that isn't how it is now. And although I have much more
faith in our future now than I once did, it just isn't going to change
anytime soon.
I pulled the truck up next to a bunker out on the perimeter.
It was an unusual vehicle. It was a 3/4 ton truck with armor plate welded
to the front of the bed rising above the cab. A machine gun mount was
placed in the middle allowing the gun to fire over the top of the cab. I
had been ordered to take the truck to the bunker line to add the firepower
of the machine gun to the already formidable line of weapons facing the
rice paddies and cane fields outside the wire. On hindsight this wasn't a
very good idea. While far from impregnable, a bunker is a very hard
structure to destroy and can be rebuilt quickly and cheaply. A truck on
the other hand is a relatively valuable, easy to destroy, and very
tempting target.
I got out and hopped up into the bed to get things ready for
the night. Since I had to pull guard duty anyway, the thought of spending
the night in a nice, dry, relatively clean truck sounded much better than
the usual damp, dirty, rat infested bunker. I loaded a belt of ammunition
and settled back to begin another long, tense night.
The gun mount had a spotlight on both sides of the gun so you
could see what you were shooting at in the dark. This was undoubtedly
designed by someone who had never thought the situation through. I had no
intention of ever using them to aim, as doing so would be about the same
as drawing a bull's eye on your nose and shining a light on your face.
But the lights were good for surveillance. I would duck below the armor
plate, flip on the lights and look through a small hole drilled in the
plate while swinging the gun back and forth to illuminate the landscape.
The night was very dark. I had just flipped on the lights and
started moving the gun, when right in front of me almost to the concertina
wire a VC sapper jumped up and started running. I was startled for a
second, but yanked the charging handle, swung the gun around on him, and
totally forgetting what an easy target I made, started shooting. As the
tracers caught up to him, he dove below one of the dikes of a paddy. By
this time someone had popped a hand flare, and the landscape was bathed in
the eerie Halloween glow of its flame. The only sound was the hissing of
the flare drifting down from far above on its little parachute. Suddenly
the man jumped up a short distance from where he had disappeared and began
zig-zagging away across the landscape. I started firing, following him
with tracers, but every time the rounds caught up to him he would dive and
disappear again. It was impossible to gauge the location and direction of
his next sprint. This went on for quite a few minutes until he finally
made it into the cover of a cane field and was gone for good. If I'd hit
him he never showed it. I yelled out at the night "Motherfucker, you
DESERVE to get away!" and really meant it. I was laughing with the stress
and adrenaline rush, but was absolutely furious at myself for missing
him. I was a pretty good shot and I wanted that bastard DEAD! He had
been only seconds away from lobbing a satchel charge or two into my truck,
and that could have very easily ended in disaster for me. That, plus the
sick and all too common conviction men are subliminally taught from
boyhood, that killing a man would make me more of one, only added to the
anger. Very quickly those feelings were tempered with the awareness that
I had just witnessed the bravest thing I had ever seen. That guy had
single-handedly crept up to a perimeter of barbed wire, claymore mines and
trip flares, backed by bunkers filled with soldiers equipped with quite an
array of deadly weapons, and all for the purpose of destroying one lousy
truck. Or he had possibly not been alone, but had taken the heat on
himself to save his friends. Either way it was amazing. I think we were
all stunned by the display of courage and skill we had just seen. It had
been something totally outside my previous experience. Then as I began to
realize how close I had skirted death, the raw reality of our situation
set in once again. It was impossible for me to stay aware of how
dangerous Vietnam was on a continuous basis and still maintain the ability
to function. But every so often a reminder would jolt me back into the
paralyzing fear, and once again I'd just have to hang on and wait until it
slowly drifted away.
The anger that I'd felt on failing to kill that man, along
with many other terrible memories ate at me for years. But slowly as time
passed, my mind began to heal, and I found my heart opening to a more
loving, kind, and spiritual way of life. The anger turned to acceptance,
and then one fine day to gratitude. I am so very glad I don't have the
death of another human being on my conscience. He was an enemy soldier
fully intending to kill me if he could, and if I had killed him I'm sure I
could accept it as just another part of my life and a necessary action at
the time. But on those nowadays rare nights when I wake up feeling lost,
alone, and afraid, with Vietnam all around me, the relief of not having
killed him helps me find my way back to my warm, safe bed a lot sooner
than those old feelings used to. Love and kindness are such beautiful,
healing things.
"Harris" was a friend of mine. He was a tall, lanky, soft
spoken black man with an easy smile. A gentle man with a kind disposition
and a wry sense of humor. Sometimes we'd pull guard together and talk
quietly in the eerie silence of the bunkers at night. Solving the
troubles of mankind, or talking about what we were going to do when we got
back to "The World" helped ease the fear and tension of our situation and
also helped keep us from falling asleep. Harris somehow transmitted
confidence to me just by being around. He was one of those people it was
hard to imagine God allowing anything bad to happen to, and being around
him just felt somehow "safer".
He was in one of our bunkers that VC sappers blew up one
night. He was also one of the few wounded "lightly" enough to come back
to the company out of all the guys that had been in those bunkers. I
never saw most of those guys again, but old Harris came walking back one
day and I was so very glad to see him. But something was wrong. He was
distant and cold. It was like he didn't even know me. He was scary and
alien, and from then on I kept my distance. It hurt, but he had been
through an experience I hadn't, and looking at him I knew that it must
have been much stranger and more horrible than I could imagine.
Months later, a few of us had been drinking beer and
celebrating our soon to be homecoming. We were staying in a large,
relatively safe basecamp at Pleiku in a sandbagged shack my company used
as a transit barracks. We were processing out to go home! Home! We
couldn't believe it (we had yet to experience the "Welcome Home" of the
1960's for Vietnam Vets). The other guys had gone somewhere, and as I was
sitting alone reveling in the awesome feeling that it was almost over, who
should walk in but Harris! It was great to see him before I left, and I
greeted him with a smile and feeling of love in my heart.
He looked at me with a funny smile, then came over and sat
next to me on the bunk. He stared at me for a minute and then said "I
knooow who you are! I knooow about your kind!" in an eerie, wavering
voice. He sounded so much like an actor in a scary movie I thought he was
kidding and waited for the punchline. But what happened next was so quick
and surprising, I didn't realize what had occurred until it was over. I
suddenly found myself with a choking arm around my neck, and a knee in my
back with the pressure steadily increasing to the level of very serious
pain. Harris began to laugh. But the sound he made was like a horrifying
caricature of someone insane. It dawned on me then that this was no
joke. He wasn't kidding. He was really, truly out of it, and I might be
in terrible trouble. I still couldn't believe it. Then he said "I'm
going to kill you now! I'm going to snap your spine! I know who you
really are!" and that's when the terror kicked in. He began to slowly
push in with his knee while choking me tighter, and the pain became
unbelievable. The shock of what was happening was almost worse than the
pain. All of a sudden the pressure was released, and I dropped to the
floor. My buddies had returned, and seeing what was happening had crept
up behind Harris and yanked him off of me. He didn't even fight or say
anything, just sat on the bunk and stared at me looking totally vacant and
emotionless. He was the most frightening person I've ever seen, then or
since.
I don't know what happened to him. I don't know what weird
place his mind went after the attack that awful night. And I never will
know. It's just one of those things I've had to learn to accept. But
something I find much harder to accept is that Harris wasn't alone. What
happened to his mind happened to many, many more than just him. Who knows
how many? And who knows what kind of torturous horrors they've lived with
since, and may live with until the day they die? Those thoughts I
sometimes find very hard to accept. But as with so many things, I'm
powerless over it all. I just try to be thankful to God for the life he's
given me. Thankful that I wasn't in that bunker with him. It was very
close.
Harris was a kind and loving man. I like to think he found his way back.
He was my friend, and I miss him.
Dust. It was everywhere and in everything. In our eyes,
mouths, hair, clothes, food, and water. It was from the medevac
helicopters. As the Tet offensive raged on, the choppers just kept coming
in one right after the other, many times all day long, bringing in the
dead and wounded from everywhere. Sometimes three or four helicopters
would be waiting their turn to land so they could go back and tempt fate
again to go get more. They were a constant reminder of what could happen
to any of us at any time. There had always been medevacs coming in, but
never anything like this. It never stopped. Whether we were building
bunkers, eating chow, or trying to catch a little sleep, the unending
river of pain, agony, and death kept right on coming. The wounded were
quickly helped or carried off the choppers in their bloody bandages and
shredded fatigues, some quiet, some moaning, some screaming, most just
curled up and lost in an agony of pain and morphine. So many of them
handicapped and disfigured for the rest of their lives. Then there was
the neverending train of bodybags. Bags and bags full of dead men,
sometimes only parts of dead men. Hauled off the choppers, dragged out of
the way, and laid in a row at first, then stacked as room ran out.
Tents with their sides rolled up with surgery tables running
down their centers were at the focus of all this. Medics were in constant
motion from chopper to table and back again as the worst cases that had a
chance, but probably wouldn't make it to a real hospital, were cut and
drained and patched and sewn in a kind of horrible, extremely bloody
ballet. This went on for days, and days, and days. Be all you can
be.
Numbing exhaustion. Aching back, arms, legs, and mind.
Suffocating tropical heat draining every ounce of motivation. Eye
stinging sweat starting at my head, running down my body, and ending up
in my burning, soggy boots making the heat rashes sting and burn. It's
too humid for sweat to evaporate and cool like it should. How much longer
can this miserable day last? Hours later these thoughts must have rolled
through my mind a hundred times. Digging holes, filling sandbags,
stacking them into bunker walls, digging, filling, stacking, digging,
filling, stacking. And the same tomorrow, and tomorrow, and tomorrow...
Flies… they swarmed through the air by the millions, their
size halfway between a housefly and a gnat, their high pitched,
infuriating bzzzzzz fraying everyone’s nerves and tempers to the
edge as they crawled all over our exposed skin, into our eyes, noses, and
ears, and tried to get between our tightly closed lips. Our arms got so
tired from swatting we finally had to just let them crawl. We had been in
Kontum for weeks now and the heat, humidity, dust and flies made us all
feel somewhat insane. But we did have lots of company there. I met them
when I first arrived and began digging a trench for our fuel cans. We put
the cans in the ground to protect us from a self-made napalm attack that
would have resulted from the cans being hit by one of the incoming mortar
rounds that peppered the area every so often at night. The idea was that
if hit, the blast and fireball would blow up, not sideways into people and
materials. Fortunately they were never hit so we didn’t have to find out
how well the theory stood up to reality. Anyway, as I began digging, the
sickly sweet and familiar stench of death wafted up from the hole. The
shovel struck some roots which were somehow covered in cloth. As I tried
to cut through the stubborn obstructions, I suddenly saw hair, and became
aware that what I thought were roots were actually bones and clothing.
The hole I’d dug was a grave. I began digging around the edges trying to
find a clear area, but soon realized I was standing in the middle of a
mass grave which had resulted from the carnage of a battle fought during
the Tet Offensive a few months earlier. I got out and tried again nearby
with the same result. I finally found an unoccupied patch and finished
the now grisly job.
It turned out that the whole area was a site of several mass
graves, exactly how many we never knew. The bodies tended to rise to the
surface in the monsoon rains, and we were made aware of their presence
again and again. A dog chewing on a rotted hand, a thighbone strung on
the mess tent sign by a prankster attempting to make light of it and
preserve his sanity, a skull unearthed and grinning on the trail to the
perimeter, and of course the flies… always the flies… the ceaselessly
swarming flies of a corrupted graveyard.
Nights on the bunkers when I was pulling my shift as the only
one awake, was a surreal, lonely, and sometimes terrifying experience.
When there was a break in the clouds and enough of a moon to see, the
vegetation would become sinister, seemingly in motion, with strange sounds
drifting through the dank, humid darkness. Along with the ever present
fear of a real attack would come the eerie feeling that if I were to turn
around, my frightened gaze would be met by the leering visage of a rotting
skull and skeletal body clothed in the tattered fatigues of one of the
residents upon whose grounds we were trespassing. It was strange times.
That kind of environment breeds disease, and I began feeling
weak and sick one day. A concerned friend said I actually looked yellow
and mentioned jaundice, so I went to see the medics and collapsed onto a
cot in the sweltering heat of the hospital tent. I was in and out of it
for about a week, losing quite a few pounds in the process. One night the
survivors of a very bad ambush were helicoptered in and I was laid on the
dirt floor to make room for the wounded. I remember drifting in and out
of an agonizing world of screaming and crying men and shouts of rushing
medics, while the roar of the choppers and shuddering of the tent in the
dusty wind from the blades created a memory of being locked into a
neverending nightmare that didn’t even seem real the next day. But it
was. I was very glad when I began feeling better and could finally leave
that place.
One day we heard a burst of automatic fire coming from inside
the perimeter. We found out that a newly arrived replacement had fired a
burst from an M16 into his foot. He was flown back out before any of us
had even met him. Maybe he was the smartest of us all.
His chiseled features and steely gaze were matched by his
powerful physique. His eyes appeared to miss nothing as they traversed
the terrain. The impression conveyed was one of immense strength and
competence. He was a Westpoint graduate, a Captain in the United States
Army, and he also happened to be an idiot. A very dangerous idiot.
He had been my company commander and in Vietnam for a very
short time. At present my company was moving from the outskirts of a town
named Kontum, located on a plateau in the Central Highlands, to a new
firebase on the side of the mountains about eight miles away. Most of the
move had been accomplished, but some assorted sheet metal and other items
of possible use to the VC was still laying around and had to be moved up
the mountain to our new area. Several of us had been chosen to drive our
trucks back to the old area and do the job.
There was quite a bit of junk to load, and by late afternoon
it was obvious to us that we would have to finish the job the next day if
we were to make it back to the firebase with some daylight to spare. This
was very important because Charlie owned the night, and to be on the road
after dark was an open invitation to be ambushed and killed.
For some reason the Captain had chosen to oversee this job in
person, and I mentioned to him that it was getting late, and we'd better
be heading out soon. The infantry had dug in to secure the area, and
there was no need to worry about the items that would be left. He told me
it was none of my concern, and to get back to work. As the sun dropped
lower, I figured he planned on staying the night and started constructing
a ring of old sandbags to bed down in for the evening. He noticed this,
and came over saying "Just what the hell do you think you're doing?" I
said "I'm building my bed for the night." He replied "Where did you get
the idea we were staying the night? As soon as these trucks are loaded,
we're heading back up the mountain!" I couldn't believe it. He was
serious! I tried to appeal to his sense of efficiency by suggesting that
if I stayed until morning I could police the area and have some good light
to make sure we'd gotten everything. He told me to shut up and get my ass
in gear if I didn't want to end up in LBJ for refusing an order (LBJ stood
for Long Binh Jail, a prison near Saigon where your time toward the
mandatory year in Vietnam was suspended until your sentence was
completed. This threat was fine motivation). That was when I realized
what he was up to. He was out to live up to his fantasy of what a brave
soldier did in war, and in his own mind he was going to be the epitome of
that soldier. He'd be damned if he was going to let a few little slanty
eyed gooks scare him. And what better way to show it than to drive
alone through the dangerous night with no more protection than a tough
expression, his superior intellect, and a 45 automatic. Now this
was what it was all about for a real soldier! He wasn't a racist,
he felt that he was immensely superior to everyone. I can't describe the
chill that went through me at the realization of this insanity. He was
enjoying my obvious fear, and so chose me to join him in his juvenile and
irresponsible folly in order to savor it all the more. I'm sure that in
his twisted mind, my fear proved his bravery. He made sure that the other
trucks were loaded and left with just enough time to spare to make it back
before dark while holding me back to watch me watching the sun go down.
As the sun dropped below the horizon he got into his jeep and
said "Follow me!" in a strong and unwavering voice of command. We pulled
out toward the road very slowly, and continued at probably 15 mph toward
the town. I wondered what he was up to, but figured he'd speed it up once
we got onto the road so we could get back to the relative safety of the
firebase as soon as possible. It didn't happen. By now we'd reached the
center of the pitch black town, and he was still driving at the same
speed. Several bursts of automatic rifle fire suddenly erupted a short
distance away to my left, and that was the end of this bullshit for me. I
sped up and got right on his ass trying to get him to move faster. He
wouldn't. Okee doke, I figured. Better to face his wrath later than to
continue to tempt fate now. I ran him off the side of the road, hit the
throttle, and began one of the most nerve wracking rides of my life. I
drove like a bat out of hell with my lights off when the road was
relatively straight, but had to use them now and then to see when it got
curvy in places. With all the racket that poor truck was making, I don't
know how much good my blackout would have done if someone had actually
been waiting around to waste any moron stupid enough to be out at night,
but it gave me a small sense of security anyway. As I drove, the road and
vegetation formed a surreal nightmare of flowing, creeping shadows, and
every one of them seemed to make my hair stand on end. There was a Special
Forces firebase between me and home, and I was hoping they might let me
stay the night and save me the drive up the mountain until daylight. The
base was constructed in a circle, and the road went in one side of it and
out the other. During the day, the gates were guarded, but open. Now
they were closed tight and I was met by chain link fence, concertina wire,
claymore mines, and bunkers bristling with barrels and full of Montagnard
(the mountain people of Vietnam) troops. A Montagnard soldier appeared
and began waving me off and yelling at me in what I suppose was his
language for "Get the fuck out of here you stupid GI!". I began yelling
back that I couldn't turn around, and needed to be let through the gates
to get back to my base. A Green Beret sergeant walked up and yelled at me
to get the hell out of there, he couldn't let me through. I said "Fine,
lock me up for the night if you want to, just let me in until morning and
I'll be out of your hair". After a few minutes of haggling, he said "Let
the sonovabitch through, but make it quick!". I pulled through the base
and continued on my way.
Finally I reached my firebase but still had to drive several
hundred feet by our perimeter bunkers full of what I was hoping weren't
trigger happy buddies. I reached the way in, and the wire was pulled
aside for me to get inside. I was greeted by "What in the hell is wrong
with you? You got a death wish or something?". I headed to my tent,
downed about three warm beers, smoked a joint, and waited for my doom.
After about a half hour, a guy came in looking wide eyed and
scared. He said "Flynn, the Captain wants to see you right now, and he
looks ready to kill you! You'd better get over there quick!". I headed
to the command tent figuring that I'd be leaving in the morning for LBJ.
I was scared, but so enraged at what he had done to me that I really
didn't care. I ducked through the flap and entered his lair.
He was sitting behind his desk talking to the first sergeant,
and made a point of ignoring me for a minute or two. Then he slowly
turned a seething gaze on me and just stared awhile, absolutely furious,
but also trying to put the fear of God into me. It was somewhat
successful, but I'm sure my anger was at least equal to his, so it came
far from achieving the desired effect. He began a tirade about cowardice,
insubordination, patriotism, and anything else that came to mind that
lasted long enough to make me nauseous (I suppose the warm beer and weed
didn't help). He then grabbed my rifle, inspected it, said it was filthy,
and told me to get my ass out of his sight, clean it spotlessly, and be
back in front of him damn quick. I cleaned my rifle and returned, having
downed another beer or two in the process. He grabbed the rifle again,
didn't even really look at it, and told me it was still filthy and to
clean it again. This process went on for four or five times until I had
become so enraged with what had happened to me, and fed up with the
childish tantrum he was throwing, that when he told me to go clean it
again I said "No sir, it's clean." His eyebrows rose in an incredulous
face, and he said "WHAT DID YOU SAY, MISTER???". I repeated "No sir." He
then began blasting me with threats ranging from bodily harm to jail, and
finally wound down, telling me again to go clean my rifle. I said "No
sir." and he just sat there looking amazed. After a moment he said "Are
you DRUNK?". I said "Yes sir, I imagine I am." He then said "Get out of
my sight!", and that was the last I ever heard of what had happened.
Sometimes in quiet moments I think of what happened that
night. And then visions of all the dead, wounded, and mutilated bodies of
the casualties of every war ever fought drift through my head. Visions of
human beings and the unique mosaics that made up their lives. All of the
precious and lost memories of good times, loved ones, and dreams of the
future that existed inside every individual who was ever destroyed by
war. I think of how much of that destruction was unnecessarily caused by
people like the Captain. People guided by childish, self centered egos,
wanting to be some kind of hero to themselves and the world, almost always
at the expense of others. And when I think of that, I feel very sad.
"Ouch, damn it!" I thought, as the truck hit another deep
pothole. Years of removing VC mines and filling the holes of the ones
that worked had made the dirt roads bumpy beyond belief. My back and arms
are killing me and the choking dust has caked around the goggles on my
face and feels gritty and pasty in my mouth. I can't take one more bounce
(but of course I'll take that and more because there's no way out). The
roar and rattle and banging of my truck has long since numbed my ears to
the outlandish racket around me. Driving long enough puts me into a kind
of nightmarish trance. Common sense tells me to keep an eye on my
surroundings and watch for patches of dirt which could be mines, but it's
getting harder to do anything but hang on to the wheel and keep the damn
truck on the road. The sides of the road are usually steep dirt walls
dropping off into rice paddies and cane fields, so losing it for a second
or two can spell real disaster, especially when the roads are slick with
mud or a convoy coming the other way forces us over to the edge of the
dropoff. Pulling over doesn't exist, and you don't "stop" in the middle
of a fast moving convoy with trucks in front and rear and potential
ambushes always possible. My God, how many more months will I be here?
Will it ever end? I guess I'd better watch what I wish for.
"LET'S MOVE 'EM OUT!" was loudly relayed down the long line of
trucks and tanks ready to begin the convoy from our base at LZ Baldy to
firebase Ross, a little south of Da Nang. It was during the Tet offensive
in February 1968. The Tet offensive was a very bad time for everyone in
Vietnam. The communist forces launched the biggest offensive of the war
and the whole country fell into total chaos for about a month. The effect
on my unit was mainly mortar and rocket attacks many times a night, very
hazardous convoy duty to supply a tiny firebase nearby, and the most
ominous event to us, the halting of mail delivery for several weeks. The
lack of mail in itself was a hardship, but for circumstances to be bad
enough to halt something with as high a priority as mail, we knew that
something horribly bad had to be happening everywhere. I'm certain that
the folks back in "The World", as we called home, had a much better
picture of the situation through the news than we who were actually there
did. In movies and books, soldiers always seem to have a handle on the
situation. In real life, I remember not knowing what was happening from
day to day, and waking up totally disoriented in pitch blackness to the
screaming of "INCOMING!" while trying to figure out where I was and where
to go as I grabbed for my rifle and bandoleers of ammo. Many times we
slept with our boots on for several days, as to keep trying to find them
and put them on every time a mortar attack came in was just too time
consuming and exhausting. I got to the point where I'd just roll off my
cot and huddle in the sandbagged corner of my tent rather than run across
an open area with mortar rounds exploding here and there to find "safety"
in a bunker. That didn't seem so safe to me. Not to mention the terrible
feeling of claustrophobia I felt when packed into a tiny sandbagged space
in pitch darkness with a bunch of guys between me and the door who would
pack in tighter and tighter each time the VC would walk the rounds in
close. Anyway, as the convoy moved out, the tension increased, and once
again I'd find myself thinking of how long it would be before I'd see home
again if I ever did at all.
The fifteen mile or so round trip to Ross took from early
morning to late afternoon. Out front of the convoy was a jeep, and in
front of the jeep were guys on foot with sharp eyes and metal detectors.
By the time we got to Ross they would have blown quite a few mines in
place, and filled part of the bed of a truck with mines that they'd dug
up. The landscape we drove through looked like the moon in places with
the huge bomb craters saturating the area. Gunships constantly flew low
and fast over us, startling, but reassuring us with their roaring
presence. As my truck was mostly filled with high explosive mortar
ammunition, grenades, and rifle and machine gun ammo, I knew that if I hit
a mine, there was a good chance it wouldn't hurt. Nothing would ever hurt
again. It was actually kind of comforting in a weird way.
Once they found a mine out front of a little house next to the
road. Why anyone would be living in that nightmare place I couldn't
imagine, but there they were, right next to my truck, a family of several
women and children with one old man in their midst. A few of our guys
were questioning them about the mine, and apparently they didn't like what
they heard. They knocked the old man down and began beating him with
rifle butts and kicking him while the women and children screamed and
screamed with fear and anger, wanting to stop them but knowing they
couldn't. It was very vicious and thorough, and he looked dead or close
to it by the time they finally stopped. Then they lit the house on fire
and walked away. As we moved out I looked back in the mirror. The family
was just huddled by the old man's body and crying as they watched their
home go up in flames. All that was left on our return trip was a little
blackened and charred area with nobody there at all.
I walked up and sat down beside him like I'd known him for
years. I felt sure he wouldn't mind. We looked at each other for a while
and then sort of struck up a conversation. The reason I'd singled him out
was because he scared me. For the past few days whenever I had to go down
to the bunker line at night, passing by him was a bit unnerving. Maybe if
we got to know each other a little better the fear would go away. I hoped
so, because I'd always been afraid of people like him even though the fear
seemed unfounded. Getting over those feelings would be well worth the
effort. There were too many of his kind around to let my fear and
prejudice rule me.
As we spent a little time together, I began to feel empathy
for him. I knew that before my tour in Vietnam was over we might have a
lot more in common than we did now. But I hoped not. His life was a
story like my own. He'd known happiness and sadness, love and anger, fear
and strength. He'd held a girl's hand at night and watched the moon and
stars reflecting off the water, thinking of how beautiful life was going
to be from now on. Felt all the things we all feel. He'd marveled at a
beautiful sunset, and laughed at a silly joke. We were from different
countries, but he'd felt alot like me in many ways.
As I sat there, his appearance began to be a bit of a burden.
The wispy hair, and whiteness of his face. The hollows where his eyes had
been, and bits of leather still stuck to the bone. The time he'd spent in
a muddy mass grave before one of my buddies tripped over his slightly
protruding skull and unearthed his rotted face hadn't done much for him.
Still, I was glad I'd taken the time to have an imaginary conversation
with him. He wasn't so scary any more. He was a person now. Just
another guy like me who wanted to live his life the best he could. That
was over for him now, but not for me. It made me want to do a little
better. Be a little nicer, maybe smile a little more. After all, things
could always be worse.
YOU were in Vietnam? I didn't know you'd been to Vietnam. You've never
mentioned it before.
I
guess it just never came up before.
It
was pretty bad over there, huh?
It
wasn't good, but it could have been a whole lot worse.
Were you at the front doing the actual fighting?
There really was no "front". I mostly drove a truck and filled sandbags.
Oh, so you weren't in actual combat. That's good. The guys who were
really in combat came back pretty screwed up. That kind of stuff can
really screw up your mind. You're lucky you got to drive a truck. I've
got a friend who was up at the DMZ most of the time. He's really messed
up over all that shit. All of his friends got killed while he was there.
He was the only one left out of all the guys he went over there with. He
still gets pretty bad dreams about it, his buddies dying in his arms and
all, but he sure wasted a bunch of gooks to make up for it. Made 'em pay
for it real good. Those gooks were really mean, cruel fuckers. You had
to watch out for those sneaky bastards. They'd cut some guy's dicks off
and stick them in their mouths while they were still alive. I've seen
alot of books and movies about it, and stuff like that happened all the
time.
Yeah, a lot of bad things came out of the war. There was some pretty good
exaggeration about some of that stuff though. A lot of cruelty and
horrible things definitely went on on both sides, but some of the stories
you hear weren't very typical of everyday reality. And sometimes,
exaggerated or not, that's all you do hear because of a vet's overwhelming
desire to get things off his chest combined with the knowledge that so
many people don't really want to hear what's important to him. They just
want to feed their fantasies. It's a hard realization when you find that
the painful baring of your soul is really just cheap entertainment. One
of the reasons people don't talk about it much is because unless you
babble stuff full of blood and guts, nobody seems to listen. The
important things, the things that tear you apart and really matter to you,
just aren't very interesting to most people. It's too uncomfortable for
them. As they say, the first casualty of war is truth. And the truth
fades as the "boring" things are left out.
Oh, I know some guys bullshit, but this guy I know doesn't lie. He really
had it rough there.
I
didn't mean your friend was a liar, I just meant that it's a good idea to
have an open mind, but take everything with a grain of salt. And to try
to listen to the underlying messages; that war isn't romance, glamour, and
excitement, with music in the background and tough guys saying tough and
humorous things at just the right time. That love and compassion for
others is the true and final solution to every one of our problems. The
sad fact is that unless you've been there yourself, it's sort of hard to
imagine what "tough" can be. If a story isn't pure, distilled carnage, it
sometimes doesn't make much of an impact on people who haven't had a
similar experience, and who have been conditioned all their lives by
books, television, and movies pushing different versions of "Kill 'em all
and let God sort 'em out".
I
know what you mean. Did you see Platoon? Man, that showed some of the
really gory action that happened to the guys over there! Most Nam movies
are crap, but that one showed what it was really like. I've read a lot of
stories about it, and Platoon really showed some truth. A lot of stuff
you see is like the old John Wayne hero junk. John Wayne was a really
good actor, but his movies were made a long time ago. Nowadays movies
show a lot more real stuff. The good ones do, anyway.
Well, I'm just glad to be home. And I'm glad your friend made it home
too. Mostly I'm glad the war is pretty well over for most folks.
What? Oh yeah. Me too. Be glad you weren't in combat. You were lucky.
Alot of guys like my friend are still real screwed up! Well, take it
easy.
Yeah, you too.
This was
written quite awhile ago. Since then I have found that most of the time,
the pain of Vietnam is, if not gone, at least tolerable. Life today is
good. A great part of that is due to a profound spiritual change, but a
considerable amount can be attributed to the writing of the above. I
don't know how it works, but putting things down on paper has proven to be
an amazingly therapeutic activity for me. If you, like many of us, have
memories that seem to eat away at all the good things in your life and
keep you from enjoying the blessings that you may not even know you have,
try writing about them. Then maybe you too will be able to finally seize
your life back from the demons of the past and strive to walk in awareness
of the grace of God.