This story is the property of the writer Kalimaxos.
You asked for a sequel, you got it.
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Nightmares
"Norris."
I was in a fog in darkness.
"NORRIS!"
I heard a loud voice. It was them. Again!
"You can't escape us," said Rivera.
"Don't even try," said Pearlman.
"Maybe we should try something humorous to get him going," said Rivera.
I had heard this before and hated it.
"Go away!" I yelled at them. "Leave me alone."
"What," said Pearlman. "You don't want to hear how a Jew and a black guy go to Iraq and are left to die while their commander is busy playing hero?"
I looked up to see them in the fog. Both in sand colored camo but no headgear or any equipment. Its like we used to dress on our time off hanging around the base. The black man is Pearlman. Rivera is the Jewish man standing next to him. Interesting characters both. You would think their names are reversed, but they are not. Rivera has a Hispanic father and Jewish mother; so he was raised Jewish. Pearlman is black I don't know how he got that name. He is an orphan raised by foster parents. Go figure.
"Stop it please!" I beg.
"Not going to happen," says Rivera. "Not until you sort things out."
"What am I to sort out?"
"Come on Captain," Pearlman leans in. "Not until you figure it out."
It's the umpteenth time I have seen them come to me. Its my daily nightmare now for close to a year. I will wake soon and be up for hours until I can get them to go away. Sometimes they follow me during the day. They don't speak to me then, but I see them around town in crowds. They stare at me with questioning, demanding looks.
I wake in cold sweat gasping for breath. How many times will this happen? How long can it go on? Will they ever leave me be?
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At the therapist; the report
I tell my therapist for the umpteenth time. He listens and nods. This time he has some papers.
"Norris, we need to talk."
"Talk? More talk? All we do is talk. They keep talking about sorting it out. Sort what out?"
"I have the report in case you want to see it," Doc Russo says.
"They gave it to you?" I ask surprised.
"Well, it has a lot to do with the fact you finally signed the request to release it to me. And who you are. The Army wants you to get better. They don't want it to get out that their Golden Boy Medal of Honor holder has... issues."
"You told them what's wrong with me!" I ask annoyed and shocked that he would.
"That's insulting you would think I would," Doc Russo replies.
Doctor Frank Russo is my therapist. He is a specialist in my condition, being both an MD and a psychotherapist. He specializes in veterans who have E.D. issues after combat. Being who I am, he shuffled his patient load to take me as a patient. I'm sure he will write a paper for his medical journals once he cures me.
"Sorry Doc, I..."
"Never mind you ingrate," he replies looking at the papers as if I annoyed him. "So I went over the report. Bottom line, your Army types did go over the event and found you not responsible for the deaths of your two men. What do you have to say about that?"
"Are you sure they are not just covering up for the guy they made into a hero?"
He looks at me as if I spilled his martini and sighs.
"Page three, I'm sure you can read, but I'll read it for you."
Hassling me is his therapy style. He folds the pages over and reads.
"...The cause of death for Sergeants Rivera and Pearlman is severe trauma caused by shrapnel from the a soviet manufactured 9M113 Kornet anti-tank rocket. Whatever that is."
"It's meant to kill tanks," I reply.
"Well, it apparently exploded in the vehicle because its says the fragments were what killed your men," Doc Frank placed the papers in front of me. "I'm no expert in Russian rockets, but do you think you could have stopped one of those with your trusty M4?"
"No'" I replied. "When does it say they got hit?"
"Same page," Doc responds. "Said they got hit by the rocket soon after you and the rest of your team moved out to attack the insurgents. Norris, they were dead all the time you were going through the rescue. No way they called you and if you look at page four the survivors of your unit have no recollection of the two men in the rear calling out for help."
"So they were dead all along?" I ask.
"I'm afraid so Norris," he sits back. "They were probably the first men to die in your unit in the engagement."
"Shit," I say in realization. "I thought they would be the safest of us all."
"Its war Norris," he replies. "I was in Dessert Storm as a Navy doctor with the Marines. Men die and there is no sense to it. One man is hit by a bullet and lives, the other doesn't. It's how it is."
"Its how it is," I repeat.
"Norris," I know your PTSD is not just caused by that incident. But that incident is the root of it. Think about it."
"So if I wasn't the cause of their deaths, why are they coming back to haunt me and tell me I don't deserve my life and all that?"
'They..." he paused for effect, "are not here to say anything Norris. What you see in your dreams is what YOU think happened. Its your guilt. Survivors guilt. Remember, we talked about it?"
"I remember Doc. So I didn't cause their deaths. That's a weight off my shoulders I guess. But it bothers me that I made it and I have all I have..." I almost sob. "But they died. They should be here."
"You are not God Norris. All you were was Captain Griggs; their commander. You made a tactical decision that placed them as rearguards. On page two that is mentioned as sound tactical thinking. If not them, you would have picked two other men. And you had no way of knowing that the enemy would fire that rocket at the convoy."
"I should have," I reply still thinking it was my fault. "They had to use rockets to stop the convoy..."
"No, they didn't. It says they used a command detonated IED. There was no way you could have known."
I look up at him in wonder.
"Why didn't they tell me all this before?" I ask.
"You were not prevented from reading this had you still had your clearance. I think it was because you were in hospital and then in rehab. And by then you were out of the service with no clearance. So, you just missed your chance to see the final report. You are seeing it now, and trust me its redacted, see all the blacked out lines in pages one and further back. The part about your involvement is not classified. I'm assuming because there was hardly any secret to it. They just didn't have you around to let you know Norris. No conspiracy and no guilt on your part."
"Do you think this is what is causing my," I look away. "My E.D?"
"I'm 95% positive it is. You have no physical damage. Its psychological."
"I don't... I..." I stammer in confusion trying to sort it all out.
"Could all of this have been avoided?" I ask him.
All of this includes my issues with Amber. Our divorce.
"No Norris," he replies. "The E.D. maybe, but not your unwillingness to trust Amber. I had asked you to talk to her and bring her to our sessions for a few times at least. After all that happened, do you still think not talking to one's spouse is the way to go?"
I sat there silent realizing what a mess I had made of my and Amber's lives. How this was to effect our children down the road.
"OK," Doc Russo cuts in. "I know how that mind of yours works. Stop thinking it was all your fault. Its infuriating. We have talked about this many times. You are not God. You are not responsible for everything in life. But if you let this situation as is, you will be responsible for what happens from now on. I'll let you think about that until our next session."
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