TO THE MEMORY OF
Stephen Crane
Half a Century Later
Foreword
1. Go Home, Kurt
2. Mayfield
3. Medics
4. Final Pathological Diagnosis
5. The Shaping-Up of Macabe
6. Search and Destroy
7. Come On! Let’s Go!
8. No Fucken Cornflakes
9. Track Unit
10. Gentlemen, It Works
11. Bosum
12. Me Either
13. Choppers
14. Joan
15. $90,000,000 a Day
16. Brock
17. I Don’t Want to Go Home Alone
Glossary of Military and Medical Terms
“It is a tribute to Glasser’s great skill as a writer that from this most morally loathsome of wars, which has in some way degraded each person who has been touched by it, he has fashioned a moving account about tremendous courage and often immeasurable suffering … . Valuable and redemptive.” —William Styron
“365 Days was the best novel to come out of [Vietnam].” —David Mamet
Sixty years ago this summer, the Vietnam War began. 365 Days, written during that war and published in 1971 during the years of the most desperate fighting, has sustained itself as a history of sorts. My hope in writing the book was to explain the human aspects of the war in Vietnam, in much the same way that Stephen Crane’s The Red Badge of Courage, Erich Maria Remarque’s All Quiet on the Western Front, and Robert Graves’s Good-Bye to All That are read to understand the sacrifices of earlier wars. There is virtue enough in that for any book.
Traditional military history is usually direct and uncomplicated. Major battles are discussed, the successes and failures easily described by retreats and advances. Yet there is a growing consensus among current historians that strategic judgments about victory or defeat must be set aside for a number of years, if not decades, before all the war’s outcomes become clear. The one essential attribute of any true victory is that it must endure.
In some cases, the line between victory and defeat becomes blurred almost immediately. The Greek general Pyrrhus of Epirus made that clear following his victory over a youthful Rome at the battle of Asculum in 279 BCE. Pyrrhus destroyed the tenacious Roman legions but his losses were grievous and unsustainable. Pyrrhus was forced to remark, while overlooking the carnage of that battlefield, “One more such victory and we are lost.”
Some two thousand two hundred years later, during the Paris peace talks between the United States and North Vietnam, United States delegate Henry Kissinger is said to have explained to the North Vietnamese representative, “You are aware that we have won every battle.” The North Vietnamese general listened politely and is said to have answered, “Yes, that is true but it is also irrelevant.”
By the middle of the 1970s, our country had had enough of battlefield victories. With no peace in sight, the US decided to simply close down its bases in Vietnam, and turn the war over to the South Vietnamese in 1973. Two years later, the remaining American political and ambassadorial staffs were evacuated by helicopter from the rooftop of our embassy in Saigon.
Vietnam by any realistic metric was a defeat, whether reckoned by the enormous treasure used to pay for the war, or the fifty-eight thousand two hundred Americans killed along with the three or four hundred thousand wounded in body as well as soul. Four million young Americans went off to Southeast Asia to wage what was in reality not a ten-year war but a one-year war fought ten times.
Vietnam has not gone away. It has lingered, a crazy aunt in the attic. If you listen closely enough, you can still hear her moving about over our heads. Apparently no one was listening when we sent our troops into Iraq and Afghanistan. But there is no one in our military today who does not hear “1968” along with the real Vietnam legacy shuffling about over our heads whenever some jingoist, war buff, or politician starts talking again about what is sure to be another “splendid little war.”
No matter what any politician or talking head might say about America’s recent self-restraint, Vietnam is the true reason that our military has not yet put any boots on the ground in Libya or Syria or Yemen … at least not yet. And if we keep hearing that crazy aunt in the attic, perhaps we never will. If we keep hearing the presence of Vietnam lurking in our hearts and minds, perhaps there will never again be an American war of intervention. That in and of itself would be no small victory.
THESE PAGES WERE NOT written in desperation, nor were they written out of boredom, or even, I think, to prove a point, but rather to offset the sinking feeling we all had that some day, when the whole thing was over, there would be nothing remembered except the confusion and the politics.
There is, of course, something else to be remembered.
There was a time the Army hospitals in Japan, to one of which I was assigned, were averaging six to eight thousand patients a month. (During the Tet offensive it had been closer to eleven.) There were days and sometimes weeks when the choppers never stopped coming in, and when they couldn’t fly, the Army brought the casualties overland from the Air Force bases in ambulance buses. The surgeons seemed ready for the emergency, and even the internists. But I had been sent to Japan as a pediatrician to serve the children of the dependent military population there.
I soon realized that the troopers they were pulling off those med evac choppers were only children themselves.
Loss is a part of pediatrics. Two infants in four thousand are born with a severe congenital anomaly; fifteen percent of all prematures are mentally retarded; one out of twenty thousand children will get leukemia. The rest you struggle over: the meningitises, the pneumonias, the poisonings, and the accidents. They set the tone, for to save one child is to save the whole thing.
But to save him only to see him blown apart or blinded, to help him grow properly only to have his spinal cord transected, or to have him burned to death, puts all the effort in doubt; the vaccines, the pediatric research, the new techniques and the endless concern—suddenly it all seemed so foolish, so hopeless. To lose a child, at any time along his life, is really to lose the whole thing.
Zama, where I was assigned in September 1968, was a 700-bed hospital with a small pediatric unit of five beds and a nursery. It was the only general Army hospital in Japan. There were internists, anesthesiologists, ophthalmologists, obstetricians, gynecologists, oral surgeons, dermatologists, plastic surgeons, ENT specialists, thoracic surgeons, vascular surgeons, and even an allergist.
It was an excellent hospital. There is not, I think, a community in America that would not have been proud and happy to have had our hospital, just as it was, serving it. Literally thousands of boys were saved. But the effort had its price; after a while it all began to seem so natural, even the blind seventeen-year-olds stumbling down the hallway, or the shattered high-school football player being wheeled to physical therapy. I can remember stepping out of the pediatric clinic into a corridor filled with forty to fifty litter cases, walking past them and joking where I could, but not feeling particularly involved. At first, when it was all new, I was glad I didn’t know them; I was relieved they were your children, not mine. After a while, I changed. These kids were so brave, they endured so much, they were so uncomplaining that you couldn’t help but feel proud of them. I can remember only one boy who would not stop screaming.
In the beginning I talked to the kids just to have something to say and to get them talking. Later I came to realize they were all saying the same things—without quite saying them. They were worried, every one of them, not about the big things, not about survival, but about how they would explain away their lost legs or the weakness in their right arms. Would they embarrass their families? Would they be able to make it at parties where guys were still whole? Could they go to the beach and would their scars darken in the sun and offend the girls? Would they be able to get special cars? Above all, and underlining all their cares, would anybody love them when they got back? I would leave the head wounds with the frightening thought that some day someone might ask them what had happened to their faces.
The stories I have tried to tell here are true. Those that happened in Japan I was part of; the rest are from the boys I met. I would have liked to disbelieve some of them, and at first I did, but I was there long enough to hear the same stories again and again, and then to see part of it myself.
Initially there was no thought of putting these sketches on paper, for that is what they are—sketches, not finished stories. I did not start writing for months, and even then it was only to tell what I was seeing and being told, maybe to give something to these kids that was all theirs without doctrine or polemics, something they could use to explain what they might not be able to explain themselves. It was a brutal time for them, and in fairness I have changed the names, dates, deployments, and some unit designations.
I certainly did not see it all, and in truth I have dealt with only a small part, but I saw enough, more than enough. They all came through Japan: the 9th Division fighting in the Delta—the Riverines—the 1st Air Cav, the 101st, the 4th and the 25th, the 1st and the 173rd, the chopper pilots and the RTO’s, the forward observers, the cooks, the medics and the sergeants, the colonels and the contractors, the Special-Forces troopers and the Rangers, the heroes and the ones under military arrest, the drug addicts and the killers. Sooner or later they all came to us at Zama.
If there is more to say it will have to be said by others, though I wonder how they will do it. There is no novel in Nam, there is not enough for a plot, nor is there really any character development. If you survive 365 days without getting killed or wounded you simply go home and take up again where you left off. And then again, it is not one war but four or five. To fight in the Delta is as different from fighting in the Central Highlands as fighting in Burma was from fighting in France. The DMZ, Cambodia, Laos, North Vietnam—none of them is the same.
As for me, my wish is not that I had never been in the Army, but that this book could never have been written.
R. J. G.
Tonight I’m with myself again
I’m talking with my mind
These last three months we’ve talked a lot
And found we’re in a bind
Not that we’re different
We don’t think we’re unique
But the answers we’re questioning
Are those we’ve heard you speak
We haven’t decided you’re wrong
For experience has a function
But my mind is at the crossroad
And I think I’m at a junction
You sent us here to join you
And to fight your distant war
We did, but even those who make it home
Carry back a scar
The answer that we question most
Is one we’ve heard you say,
“You owe it to your country, boy,
It’s the American Way”
We haven’t decided you’re really wrong
For experience has its function
But my mind is at the crossroad
And I can’t find the junction
We haven’t decided you’re wrong
For experience has its function
But you’ve thrown us out here on the backroads
And we’re gonna find the junction
Wounded Medic
Surgical Ward
U.S. Army Hospital, Zama, Japan
“WHY WRITE ANYTHING?” PETERSON said. “Who wants to be reminded?”
There are no veterans’ clubs for this war, no unit reunions, no pictures on the walls. For those who haven’t been there, or are too old to go, it’s as if it doesn’t count. For those who’ve been there, and managed to get out, it’s like it never happened. Only the eighteen-, nineteen-, and twenty-year-olds have to worry, and since no one listens to them, it doesn’t matter.
But there we’re 6000 patients evac’ed to Japan last month. You’d think that so many wounded would be hard to ignore, but somehow, as Peterson says, they are. They’re written off each month—a wastage rate—a series of contrapuntal numbers, which seems to make it all not only acceptable, but strangely palatable as well.
Perhaps Peterson’s right. And if he is, then everything is a bit closer to what Herbert said when he woke up in the recovery room and found they’d taken off his leg: “Fuck you—fuck you one and all.”
Herbert lost his leg in Vietnam, but it was cut off here in Japan in the middle of the Kanto Plains. We remove a lot of limbs during all the seasons. This makes living here difficult, even without the factories. At one time these plains must have been a good place to be. There are woodblocks from the Mejii era that show it tranquil and lovely, nestled comfortably at the foot of the mountains. There is no beauty here now. Like the wounds, the rivers run, polluted and ugly, from a dirty green to a metallic gray; the rice and barley fields that used to be here have been replaced by square, filthy factories. Even the air stinks; every day is like living behind a Mexican bus. Still, no one is shooting at you here. There are no ambushes or hunter-killer teams.
No one sends out the LRRP’s, and at night you can’t hear them pounding in mortar tubes across the paddies. That’s something. You can see it on the faces of the troopers they carry in off the choppers. It doesn’t matter to them that the place smells or that the smoke from Yokahama and Yokuska blots out the stars. All that counts is that their war is over for a while and this time they got out alive.
We have four Army hospitals scattered about the plains—Drake, Ojiie, Kishine, and Zama. It’s hard to know what they’ve told you about Tet, but over here, the operating rooms never stopped. The internists and obstetricians did minor surgery, and the surgeons lived in the OR. But even when there are no offensives we’re busy. We don’t just get the Herberts—we get them all: the burns, the head wounds, the cords, the tumors. Medicine is always busy, too. The medical wards are full of patients with hepatitis, malaria, pneumonia, and kidney failure. It is something of an achievement that we’re able to do so much. In 1966 there was only one 90-bed Army dispensary in Japan; in fact, there was little else in the rest of Asia. When President Johnson chose to listen to his military advisers and send in ground troops, the Army had the choice of expanding the existing medical facilities here in Japan, building up those in the Philippines, or starting from scratch in Okinawa. Okinawa was too expensive—something about cost plus and American-type labor unions. The Philippines looked a bit too unstable, and so, despite Okinawa being four hours closer to Nam, and the Philippines having more available land, the Army chose Japan.
Everything was put here into the Kanto Plains and clustered around the Air Force bases at Tachikawa and Yokota. The Air Force brings our patients in over the mountains in their C-141’s. They stay at Yokota overnight at the 20th casualty staging area, where they’re stabilized. A lot of them have already been operated on—some massively—and it’s a long trip here. So they rest a while; they are checked again, and, if necessary, rehydrated. Nam’s hot, 110 degrees in the shade, and these kids were carrying sixty and seventy pounds of equipment and ammunition when they got hit. Some of them, too, have been humping it like that for days, if not weeks. They’re dehydrated, every one of them. The fluids they get at the 20th give them a bit of an edge. If they’re very critical, though, very seriously ill, and can’t wait, they’re med evac’ed by chopper as soon as they get off the C-141’s to one of our four hospitals.
There are nights when everyone is working and the dispatcher calls about another VSI coming in—type of wound unknown. All of us—the general surgeons, the orthopods, the opthalmologists, and the ear, nose, and throat specialists—go down to the landing pad and wait to see who’ll get it. It’s a strange sight to see them at two and three in the morning, standing out in the darkened field, some still in their operating clothes, talking quietly, waiting for the sound of the chopper.
If the cases are not critical, the patients go out the next morning on one of the routine chopper runs. The burns go to Kishine; the head and spinal-cord wounds go to the neurosurgical unit at Drake. Ojiie for the most part only takes orthopedic cases. Zama takes them all. The 406th medical laboratory is attached to Zama, and it can do anything from blood gases and fluorescent antibodies to electron micrographs and brain scans. The medical holding company is there too.
The Army likes to pride itself that no one hit in Nam is more than ten minutes away from the nearest hospital. Technically, they’re right. Once the chopper picks you up, it’s a ten-minute ride to the nearest surg or evac facility, maybe a bit longer if you’re really lit up and the med evac has to overfly the nearest small hospital and go on to the closest evac. But the choppers still have to get in and get the troopers out. By the time you’ll be reading this, over 4000 choppers will have been shot down. More than one trooper has died in the mud or dust waiting for a med evac that couldn’t get in, and there is more than one case of medics having to watch their wounded die on them because they’d run out of plasma and couldn’t be resupplied.
If the wounded get to Japan, though, they’ll probably live; the survival rate is an astonishing 98 percent. Part of it is the medical care and the facilities in Nam—the incredibly fine care and dedication that go into it. But mostly it’s the kind of war we’re fighting.
An RPD round travels at 3000 feet per second; a 200-pound chicom mine can turn over a 20-ton personnel carrier; a buried 105-mm shell can blow an engine block through the cab of a truck; a claymore sends out between 200 and 400 ball bearings at the speed of 1000 feet per second. For the VC and NVA it’s a close-up war. There is nothing very indiscriminate about their killings; it’s close-up—booby traps and small arms, ten meters—and they’re looking at you all the time.
We had a patient shot through the chest. He was in his hutch when he thought he heard something moving outside. He sat up; the moonlight came in through the door, cutting a path of light across the floor. Sitting up put him in it. The gook was waiting, lying on the ground, no more than two meters from the door. He let off a single round that ripped through the trooper’s chest. As he fell back the VC put his weapon on automatic and shot the shit out of the rest of the hutch.
If you’re going to die in Nam, you’ll die straight out, right where it happens.
If you don’t die right out you’ve got a pretty good chance; the evac and surgical hospitals do anything and everything. They are linearly set up: triage, X ray, preoperative room, OR, recovery. They are marvelously equipped—twenty seconds from triage to OR—and staffed with competent doctors, who, no matter what they think of the war, do everything they can do for its victims. Indeed, there is nothing else to do; it’s not France. Even if you have time off there’s no place to go. The 12th evac has six operating rooms and three teams of surgeons. In Nam, if they take you off the choppers alive, or just a little dead, it may hurt a lot, but you’ll live.
During Tet, the 12th did seventy major cases a day—everything: wound debridgement, vessel repairs, tendon repairs, abdominal explorations, ventricular shunts, liver resections, nephrectomies, burr holes, chest tubes, amputations, craniotomies, retinal repairs, enucleations. Sometimes, even now, they’ll have to do four or five major procedures on the same patient. Age helps; the patients are all kids who up until the time they were hit were in the very prime of life. There isn’t one who is overweight. None of them, if they smoke, has smoked long enough to eat up his lungs. There are no old coronaries to worry about, no diabetics with bad vessels, no alcoholic livers, no hypertensives. Just get them off the choppers, intubate them, and cut them open. Then they are sent to us here in Japan.
There was a tennis court here once, near the lab building. During the Tet offensive, the fence was torn down and the asphalt used for another helipad. Tet has been over now for some time, but nobody’s even thought about putting back the fence. No one mentions it; it is just understood that the court stays a landing pad. It is the way the Army handles its concerns; each individual, of course, handles it his own way. Grieg’s developed an ulcer, Dodding is letting his hair grow, Lenhardt sends every patient he can back to Nam; he does it even if he has to extend their profiles 120 days. He’s sent troopers back to the paddies with thirteen-inch thoracotomy scars and bits of claymores still in their chests. But he believes in the war and the sacrifice, in the need for making a stand and dying for it if you have to.
Peterson sends everyone he can home, or used to, until he began finding them showing up again in his ward five or six months later. “One laparotomy per country,” he’d say. But the Army feels differently, and so there is a pretty good chance that by feeling sorry for these kids and sending them back to the States he’s killed a few. A tour in Nam for an enlisted man is not considered complete unless he has been there ten months, five days. It’s considered good time if you are in a medical facility even if you spend your whole tour there—the Army simply counts it as Vietnam time. But if you are in a medical facility, discharged and declared fit for duty, and have served a combined time, either in Nam or in a hospital, of less than ten months, five days, you go back into the computer and if the Army still needs you, you get spit back to Nam. Not for the rest of your tour, but for a complete new twelve months. There are fellows who have been there for a year and a half. It’s the Army regulations, and at the beginning Peterson, who thought being an Army doctor was different from being an Army officer, simply didn’t spend the time to learn the rules. And so for months he’d profile guys back to the States, where they’d be discharged from the hospitals and returned to Nam.
He tries to hold them now; if they’re getting close to the ten-month, five-day deadline, he’ll try to extend their profiles thirty days to keep them in the hospital over the deadline. It doesn’t go over very big with headquarters, but he’s the Doc and you don’t need a panel for a thirty-day extension of a temporary profile. You can fool around with the Army if you want and do it very effectively without having to go outside the system; it’s all there and ready to use in that formal structure written down in the AR’s, which, if definitely applied, would be impossible for anyone to work under. But you have to care, really care, because the Army doesn’t like to be fiddled with. You can hold onto patients and refuse to discharge them, clogging up beds in the evac chain. You can put any cold or runny nose you see, no matter what his job, on quarters until every unit commander is screaming. You can demand that the most rigorous rules of hygiene be enforced and drive the senior NCO’s crazy. You can ask for a consult on every case, or simply be slow in your dictation until the personnel office is frantic.
The Commander is ultimately responsible for all, and when the patients start piling up at Yokota and the Air Force generals begin to complain, it is he who must answer. At Kishine there was a commander who insisted, despite formal complaints, in interfering with the doctors to the point of demanding that only certain medications be used. He ordered that the “foolishness” be stopped, and everyone obeyed. They discharged their patients, but with a note on the chart that the discharge was under protest, against their medical judgment, and only done under direct orders of the hospital Commander. Everything was put on him, and if indeed anything went wrong anywhere—if a patient died on a plane or even spiked a fever after he’d been discharged, if a cold became pneumonia, if a wound became infected—it would be he who was held responsible. Faced with the possibility of disaster, of being made responsible in fields he really knew nothing about, the Commander backed down and finally left everyone, except his own adjutant, alone.
As a military physician, how you feel about the situation depends on how you look at the war—and, of course, the casualties. Lenhardt, for instance, sees nothing wrong with the war; he says it’s better to fight the communists in Vietnam than in Utah. If you see the patients, broken and shattered at eighteen and nineteen as something necessary in the greater scheme of things, then there are no complaints. But if you see these kids as victims, their suffering faces, burned and scarred, their truncated stumps as personal affronts and lifelong handicaps, then you may take a chance on doing what you think is right.
Peterson and Grieg were two of our general surgeons. Hubart and Lenhardt were the other two. They took call every fourth night, and the nights they were on they took all the admissions that day. If they got really bombed, the others just stepped in with them. During Tet and the time the 101st went back into the Ashau, they all came in.
Peterson was on night call in the hospital when the AOD received an emergency call from the Kanto-based air command at Yokota. Because of an accident on the runway, an air evac from Nam scheduled early that morning would have to be diverted to the Naval air station at Atugi, about two miles from Zama. Atugi’s runway is shorter than Yokota’s, but the pilot had radioed that one of their VSI on board was going sour, and there was some concern whether he would get in country alive. The Air Force and the pilot were willing to take the chance on Atugi, and Atugi agreed. For those flying in Nam, the war doesn’t end with the coasts.
The plane landed a little after midnight. It came in under the eerie light of the airstrip with power on, flaps down, its wings almost forty-five degrees to the winds. Touching down on the very edge of the runway, the pilot dumped the flaps, and with the aircraft settling heavily on the concrete, slammed on his brakes, screeching the plane down the runway. Halfway down the strip the brakes began to smolder. With the plane streaming smoke he pulled it into a tight half-turn, and by applying power, skidded it along the edge of the runway until it came to a stop fifty meters from the end of the strip.
The patient was carried to a waiting Navy chopper, which ten minutes later was coming in over the administration building. The usual approach was out over the open fields to the rear of the hospital and then back in again to the landing pad. This pilot took it right in, barely clearing the roof of the building, rattling the windows the whole way in.
Peterson was waiting with the medic near the edge of the pad. The chopper had barely touched down when the crew chief jerked open the door. The inside of the chopper was covered with blood. In the dim half-light of the landing pad it looked like drying enamel.
Peterson and the medic started running onto the pad at the same time. Hunching over to clear the swirling blades, the crew chief helped them into the chopper. The wounded man, his head hanging limply over the edge of the stretcher, was still lashed to the sides of the chopper. Blood welled up from under his half-body cast. Grabbing the top of the plaster cast, Peterson tore it off. A great gush of blood shot up, hit the roof, and then dying, fell away. He put his hand quickly over the wound and pressed down to stop the bleeding; he could feel the flesh slipping away from under his hand. Taking a clamp out of his pocket, he took his hand off the wound and, with the blood swelling up again, stuck the clamp blindly into the jagged hole, worked it up into the groin, and snapped it shut. The bleeding stopped. The chopper, still running, was vibrating around him.
Covered with blood, Peterson yelled to the corpsman to get some O-negative and to call the operating room. Then, with the crew chief, he carried the soldier off the chopper and gave him the first four O-negative units right there on the helipad under the landing lights. By the time they got the patient up to the OR he had some color back.
Peterson operated for two hours. He had to expand the wound, ending up with an incision that ran twelve inches from the front of the patient’s thigh, right under his groin, and back around the sides of the leg. When he had cut out the infection and cleaned what he couldn’t cut, he had a decent view of the area and carefully went after the artery. Dissecting down through the leg’s great vessels and nerves, he found a medium-sized branch of the femoral artery, right above the bone, with a small hole in its anterior surface, and tied it off.
The pathologist from the 406th came in; they had used up all the O-negative blood they had, but it wasn’t enough. Half an hour later, a chopper carrying all the O-negative blood at Kishine came in, and two hours later one came in from Drake. It took ten units of blood, but the leg stayed on.
Ten units of blood, though, can do strange things to you. It dilutes normal clotting factors, so that even while you’re getting blood, you bleed. Before Peterson had tied off the vessel, the trooper began to ooze from the edges of the wound, then from his nose and mouth. While Peterson worked, Cooper, the head of medicine, opened the blood bank and gave the patient units of fibrinogen and fresh frozen plasma. The bleeding was held in check enough for Peterson to finish up and close the wound. He left the patient to Cooper, and since it was too late in the morning to go to sleep, he went to the snack bar and had some coffee. An hour later he began his morning cases.
Five days later they moved Robert Kurt from the ICU down to the medical ward, where he became Cooper’s patient. Peterson had checked him every day while he was in Intensive Care and continued to check on his wound even after he had left the unit. Kurt was quite a bit older than the average soldier, much more alert, and certainly more interesting than the usual adolescent corporal who came through the evacuation chain. He told Peterson he’d been drafted when he had dropped out of his first year of graduate school. It wasn’t that he hadn’t wanted to go on, he said, it was just that he was getting tired of going to school and wanted to be free for a while. He had taken a chance, and the Army got him.
Two weeks after the operation, Peterson came by and found that someone had put an 101st Airborne patch on Kurt’s bed frame.
“You’re kidding,” he said, staring at the patch.
“No,” Kurt said, shrugging. “I figured since I was in it, I might as well really be in it. Besides, I wanted to be with guys who knew what they were doing. I didn’t know,” he said, smiling good-naturedly, “they would be goddamn crazy.”
Peterson nodded, a bit too soberly.
“No,” Kurt said, “don’t get the wrong idea. They saved my life. Any other unit, and I’d be dead now. I mean it. I’m glad I was in the 101st.”
Peterson didn’t look convinced.
“It’s the truth. We get hard-core lifers, E-8’s and E-9’s, captains with direct battlefield commissions, who know fighting. It’s their life. When things get hot, they just step in and take over, tell you to get down and wait, this is what’s happened and that, and this is what to do. They’re calm, and so nobody panics. It’s not some storybook thing.” He looked down at his leg. “I know I’d be dead now, we’d all be.”
Peterson just stood there and let him talk. Apparently Kurt needed to talk, and he let him.
“We got caught—three companies. It must have been an 800-man ambush. They just waited on both sides of us and closed the door on each company—just cut us off from one another. The fire was coming into each company, from all sides, front and back. They really had us. It happens....” He paused, seeing the look on Peterson’s face. “And it’s going to keep happening. The thing is what happens after you get caught—that’s what counts. I was in B Company. If we broke through the gooks in front or in back of us, we’d be running into fire from our own companies, and they were too strong for us to move out to the flanks. We had three artillery batteries of our own working with us, and some of the 1st Air Cav’s. No one panicked. We just dug in, found out where we were, and started calling in blocking fire. We were calling it in fifteen meters from our positions. We’d call in a salvo to keep ’em from coming through and one or two rounds farther out to keep ’em from coming around. All the FO’s and RTO’s from A, B, and C Company were in touch with one another; there wasn’t any time to clear the grids. We were calling in shells on each other, but when an RTO heard another company calling rounds into the grids they were in, he had enough sense to pull in his own unit and call back their location.
“At one time, we were calling rounds ten meters from each other’s positions. That’s tough shooting. No one blew. If we’d panicked...I’d be dead. They had us cold for four hours, but we beat ’em.
“When I got hit, the med evacs couldn’t get in. The colonel just got on the horn and told one of the gunships to come in and get the wounded. I was bleeding like a pig. They came in, firing the whole time, picked us up, took us right in to the TOC CP; they were getting hit too, but the 101st always carries a surgeon along with them at the TOC. The gunship must have blasted half the CP apart to get us in. The Doc clamped my leg and gave me blood and sent me off again.
“That’s the difference, see,” Kurt said. “I mean support, not panic, knowing what you’re doing, good officers and NCO’s. The 4th and 25th Divisions would have been shooting at each other, breaking out into each other’s lines of fire, calling in artillery and gunships all over the place, and there wouldn’t have been a colonel around to give a shit.”
Peterson shook his head.
“I know what you’re thinking,” Kurt said. “But once you’ve hit a village where Charlie’s gotten no cooperation, you sort of get a different view of things. They really kill ’em, the kids and the old people. No, I’m not kidding. We hit three like that. They hang the bodies from the main gate. It makes you think after a while.”
“See you tomorrow,” Peterson said politely and left. He’d heard it all before, all the reasons. To him it seemed that those in the government had gotten us into a war and then, finding themselves in a bind, not quite sure of themselves, had simply abandoned the problem and left each person to decide for himself. Well, since the options were out, he would use his.
The next morning, he took out half of Kurt’s stitches. There was some pus oozing out from the edge of the incision. While Peterson probed the wound, squeezing out the pus pockets, Kurt talked. As Peterson plunged deeper, Kurt gritted his teeth but kept on talking about a trooper who’d frozen on a pull-release bouncing betty.
“But why didn’t you help him?” Peterson interrupted as he put down his probe.
Kurt looked up at him, obviously offended. “How?” he said flatly.
“Get him off it,” Peterson said, as he put a new dressing on the wound.
Kurt shrugged. “If we could have, we would have. Look,” he said seriously, testing his leg, stretching it out a bit more on the bed, “it was a bouncing-betty booby trap. They’re all pull-release: you step off it, and then ‘boom’, the lifting charge goes off and throws the explosive charge up into the air.”
“Couldn’t you have put something on it and let him step off it?”
“Who you gonna get to do it? The detonator’s no bigger than a tit, and you don’t know how much pressure you need to hold on it to keep it from going off. Some of them are really unstable. You don’t have to step off it to set it off; just shifting your weight can do it. Your foot goes first. You just have to leave them. You have to...”
The wound healed nicely, and toward the end of the week Cooper discharged Kurt from the ward and sent him to the medical holding-company barracks, where he could have his physical therapy three times a day without having to stay in the hospital. Peterson gave him the key to his house, and Kurt spent most of his time there, listening to the stereo, reading the magazines, but mostly just taking it easy. After two weeks, his leg was good enough for him to start some slow jogging.
The surgical evacuations were picking up again. Jogging around the hospital area, Kurt was out early one morning when the first med evac choppers began coming in. As they circled slowly around the rim of the fields he watched them, one after another, noting the Red Crosses painted on their noses as they moved in over him.
Peterson never mentioned the evacs to Kurt. They were mostly frag wounds. Some of the kids came in off the choppers with as much as fifty or sixty pieces of steel scattered through their chests and abdomens, and operations lasted five and six hours.
Coming home late one night, Peterson found Kurt sitting quietly on the bench on the front porch.
“Hard day?” Kurt asked, moving over a bit to make room for Peterson to sit down.
“Yeah, they can get sort of long.”
In the dim light streaming through the open door they could barely make out each other’s features.
“You know,” Kurt said quietly, “the only thing that really bothers me about going back—the only thing that really scares me—are those first few weeks.” He looked at Peterson. “I’ve gotten sloppy here; I mean, I’m not sharp anymore. I was running today, some kid came up behind me, and I didn’t even hear him. You know,” he said, turning back to the dark, “I was out on patrol one night. I heard something, I can’t even remember what, or maybe I didn’t hear anything, maybe I just felt it. I stopped the patrol and got everyone into a defensive perimeter. We just lay down head to head, and the gooks broke out all around us, must have been a company. They were moving right at us. We were in some deep shit. I don’t know why I did it, I did it without thinking. I sent off a round. The echoes screwed ’em up and they moved off again in another direction.” Kurt sounded very concerned. “I don’t know if I could do it anymore—takes a while to get back into things.” He turned to Peterson again. “They would have killed us...I’d be dead now....”
The next day, Kurt began pushing himself. In physical therapy they had been using weights on his leg. It was feeling better. He started with short wind sprints and timed miles. His leg kept improving.