This started as the introductory scene for a novella twenty times longer. I gutted it because I didn't like where it made up its mind to go.
Afterward, I realized this was a complete story—beginning, middle, and an ending—on its own, albeit a very short one. Which isn't to say that we won't see Glenn again in a serialized set of stories of which this would be the first.
There's a little bit of jargon and acronym-ese in the beginning, but I think most of it can be figured out from context. I hope it doesn't detract from your enjoyment. If you anticipate it will bother you, I put a short glossary of some of the terms at the end that you can check before you begin.
—C
─────────
They made him a second lieutenant.
They gave him his two bars of gold.
They made him a forward observer.
He lived to be ten seconds old.
— to the tune of
My Bonnie Lies Over the Ocean
• • •
I'm still not sure which was worse: being in 'Nam or coming home.
Being over there exposed me to torrid heat, exhaustion, canker sores from jungle rot, malaria, diarrhea, constant rain, constant boredom, and coming close to being killed or maimed probably more times than I know.
I mean that last literally: whether it was a fourteen-year-old sitting twenty feet away in the jungle with an AK and a burning hatred of Yanks, or a toe-popper mine in a paddy. Or even that snake we called a "two-stepper" in the idiotic belief that's how long you'd live after a bite.
And though I didn't learn about them until sometime later, you could add: Agent Orange, cancer from liver flukes, and the Hepatitis C endemic among the vets. Let's not even mention what everyone now calls PTSD.
Coming home exposed me to Jackie getting my paycheck while Jody got her. Jody being named Brad in this case.
• • •
I stepped off the Pan Am 707 from Tan Son Nhut wondering if she'd be there to meet me. I'd called collect at a refueling stop in Alaska, but no one had answered, so I had to hope she'd gotten my letter. Otherwise, I figured I'd have to hunt down a cab. But she was there, and all was right with the world for about fifteen seconds.
Then, as I caught her up for a kiss followed by a hug, my mouth nuzzling into her neck, I saw the hickey there. Far back, hidden by her long brown hair, but I know a goddamn hickey when I see one and it was a doozy. As I stepped back from her, I saw Brad over her shoulder. He wasn't my best friend, but I thought he was a buddy. Yet, he didn't look glad to see me. He looked nervous and guilty ... seriously nervous and guilty ... and seriously upset at what he was watching.
I'm not stupid.
Yeah, a year is a long time. Yeah, I got horny. But no boom-boom girls for me because that's the deal when it comes to marriage. I had expected Jackie to do the same. Evidently, my expectations were a mite high.
So, I had a decision to make.
The thing about being a butter bar over there is that you don't know shit. So, there are two options. You could run around like a headless chicken, trying to cope with something for which you were absofuckinglutely unprepared. That would be a good way to get everyone killed. Or just you, if your men didn't think you were going to grow out of it pretty quickly.
Alternatively, you could shut your trap and listen to everything the old boots told you, allowing for the obvious hazing and general screw-with-the-louie moves. And the thing you heard the most was to stay as cool as you could when the noise started, then figure out what the situation required to accomplish the job and get everyone out. And do it "fookin' toot sweet" as my RTO used to say.
The CO of the company I was embedded with was this second-tour captain who knew his shit, and Top
definitely
knew his. They made it crystal clear which approach was acceptable. I was a forward observer, and that meant I was on that first chopper for a combat assault in case Charlie was present in a big way. Nineteen times. In other words, I had become used to acting calmly while my gut was clenched in a knot and dealing with shit quickly.
Of course, "shit" had meant laying down some suppressing artillery around a supposedly cleared LZ to let the trailing slicks land. I didn't think it would be having to figure out a reaction to a wife who, apparently, didn't like cold beds while you were away.
So, I stayed cool and figured out what to do
tout de suite
. Sometimes you had to call fire in around your own position to stay alive. I scooped up my duffel and headed briskly for the doorway.
"Glenn, wait! Brad's here to say hello, and the car's the other way." Jackie was caught off guard and scurried after me, pulling at my arm.
"Hello, Brad," I tossed over my shoulder, continuing to make a beeline for the doors.
"Glenn! Stop! What's gotten into you?" she demanded.
I paused and met her irritated face with the blandest one I could muster given my suddenly fucked-up mood. "It's simple, Jackie. I am hungry, tired, and haven't gotten laid in about a year. So, I'm off to find some food, a hotel, and a woman, not necessarily in that order. You are well-fed, well-rested, and clearly well-laid, so you and Brad should just go back to wherever you're shacked up."
After "haven't gotten laid" in the second sentence, her face looked surprised. After "a woman" in the third, it started turning angry. After "clearly well-laid" in the fourth, it was stricken.
That last was all the confirmation I needed. She stopped dead, as did Brad. Good for him. I wasn't one of those hard cases I'd left in-country who could annihilate a squad with just a P-38 out of a C-Ration, but I'd lived with bloodshed for a year now and pulled the trigger more than once. My inhibitions against violence were more on the order of "Advisable?" than "Inconceivable!"
Brad, on the other hand, wasn't much different from the college boy he'd been the last time I saw him. He'd have hit the floor before he even figured out he was in a fight.
"Glenn, I-I don't know what you're talking—"
"Save it, Jackie! If you want to keep that kind of thing a secret, tell lover boy to stop giving you hickeys and to stop acting jealous when he sees someone kiss you. And don't freeze in panic when accused." I saw her hand fly to her neck. I guess she hadn't realized he was marking his territory before I came home.
"Have a rotten life." With that, I turned and didi'd the hell out.
Governor Reagan had signed the first no-fault divorce bill in the country over a year before. That made it easier—no need to scramble for proof—and I took quick advantage. The judge awarded her half of our savings, which weren't much; most of our joint belongings because I didn't want them; and enough of my pay for eighteen months, the length of our marriage before I filed, to make up for the disparity in our incomes.
I was expecting a lot worse. But even though her lawyer objected and I got a verbal reprimand from the judge, I guess a moment of smart-assery in court was worth it. When asked if reconciliation was possible, I stood there in my Class As, some fruit salad on my left chest, and said, "Your Honor, if someone can tell me how to reconcile 'forsake all others' with the freshly stained sheets on my bed when I got back, maybe." With that haircut, I figured him for Korea. The look he shot her before lecturing me about respect in a courtroom told me I probably figured right.
The fact that I didn't go all John Wayne on either of them had nothing to do with my emotions and everything to do with not wanting to be arrested. Other than "Leave me alone" and "Get the fuck out of my way," I didn't speak to her from that moment in the airport onward.
• • •
Until almost five years later, when she walked up to my table in The Pot Still. I knew she'd made attempts over the years. Friends told me she'd ask where I was stationed, how to get in touch with me, but I'd left strict instructions for radio silence. I guess one of them didn't listen because here she was, not forty-eight hours after I came back for a temporary visit. And she knew which watering hole to find me in, to boot.
"Please talk to me, just for a few minutes, Glenn. Please."
I contemplated the prospect. I had nothing I needed or wanted to say to her. On the other hand, the rage had burned out over the years and I didn't care anymore.
"How'd you know I was here?"
"Someone told me."
"Who?"
She didn't answer, so I turned back to my beer with a quiet, "Goodbye, Jackie."
She edged around the table so I'd have to turn my back if I didn't want to look at her. "Why does it matter?"
"I like to know who's loyal and who'll betray me." That hit home. I saw the flinch.
"You don't know her." Before I could ask the obvious question, she continued. "Carly, Kevin's fiancée."
I knew the name but, yeah, I'd never met her. Kevin was a friend from growing up, and I'd be seeing him later. I was pretty sure he wouldn't have told Jackie diddly-squat himself, so he probably just slipped up. Maybe I should send him one of those World War II posters of "Loose Lips Sink Ships" for Christmas.
"Please, Glenn."
Oh, what the hell. I kicked a chair out from the table.
"You've been gone, and I couldn't figure out how to see you to talk."
The Army had made it pretty easy to accomplish that. I had headed to Ft. Sill in Oklahoma almost immediately for a stint as an instructor, flying back only for the day in court, then bounced to Bragg in North Carolina. I'd wondered if I'd be doing a second tour in 'Nam but Nixon shut all that down, and a spell playing Cold Warrior in Germany was my only other overseas posting before I started thinking about whether active duty was really what I wanted for the rest of my life.
At least she didn't try to blow smoke up my ass. "I'm very sorry I cheated on you."