I've wanted to tell this story for more than 12 years, but couldn't without hurting the people I love. But, they have finally agreed to let me talk about it as long as names, places and circumstances were changed.
My husband and I love each other very much and have each made sacrifices for the sake of our love. In fact, I've realized that all forms of love require some sacrifice. In our case, the conflict between two forms of love caused us to sacrifice and also savor the rewards of loving.
If you've seen the movie "Love, Actually" you've seen several examples of different types of love. The film can be a bit sappy, but it does show love in several forms beyond conventional couples sharing their lives together. One woman character sacrifices her own life and possible love with a man in order to support her emotionally disturbed brother. One man loves the character played by Kiera Knightley (who wouldn't love her?) but sacrifices his own desires for her because she is married to his best friend. Some couples work out easily together, others have to suffer because of their love.
In my case, my husband loved me emotionally, sexually and intimately, but he was also called by duty to another strong love. It wasn't another woman, it was another type of love altogether.
Dave Wilkins and I were both 27 when we met. I had previously been married for a short while and then divorced that mistake. I did learn from the experience though. I learned to appreciate a person's ability to care about others, and recognize when that caring wasn't present. The sex had been great, but even that became abusive after a year.
Dave had served in the army during the Iraq war. He and his high school buddies had joined together and somehow managed to serve together for almost 2 years. He had also learned many lessons from that experience.
We were introduced by my friend Amy at a Christmas party and just like Frank Sinatra said (or sang) we were strangers in the night. "Little did we know, love was just a glance away, a warm embracing dance away..." Yes, I know it sounds corny, but we both really fell for each other that night. We weren't drunk or trying to impress anybody, we just felt an emotional attachment when we looked into each other's eyes. I know any counselor would warn against intense, but short, relationships. Ours was intense, but lasted for the rest of our lives.
Dave was the CEO of a logistics services company. That means they helped other companies find better ways to move products and supplies to where they were needed, when they were needed. His experience in the army had taught him the importance of logistics to any organization. He and his four army buddies pooled their money to buy a money-losing company and then turned it into a very profitable enterprise. They renamed it Carson Logistics, in honor of one of their buddies who had been killed in Iraq.
We started dating the next week after meeting and were each thrilled to learn more and more about this new special person. I was certainly thrilled with his appearance and demeanor. He still had his army fitness going for him, he was very handsome and his confidence from running the company was exciting. I had been rather conservative in my past sex life and found his physical appeal very arousing. I still had my 22 year old body and Dave showed his appreciation for my shape and curves.
We discovered that we both liked mountain hiking and snow skiing. We both didn't like opera and NASCAR racing. Dave soon arranged for a double date with one of his buddies from the army who was the CFO of the company. Ron Armstrong and his wife Rosemary were certainly fun-loving and easy to like. Rosemary and I soon bonded and traded gossip about the company and our men. I learned from her about the unusual comradery and closeness of the 5 army buddies who now ran Carson Logistics.
Over the first few weeks, Dave and I spent an increasing amount of time together. We both enjoyed the activities, but also savored the quiet times when we just cuddled and talked about ourselves and our dreams. It was during those times that Dave slowly opened up about his experiences in Iraq.
I learned that the 6 high school friends (Dave, Ron, Charlie, Denzel, Dan and Steve) had signed up together and requested to be assigned together. After basic training at Ft Benning, they had a short tour in Germany, then flew into Iraq. Like most soldiers who have seen combat, Dave was reluctant to talk about the hard parts -- and there were many hard parts. Over the years with Dave there were enough drunken parties with the buddies and depressed soul searching that I learned most of their horror stories -- and the reasons for their closeness.
They were in Iraq in 2006 when the Sunnis brought the fight back to the Americans and horrible things were done on all sides. House-to-house combat was terrifying and very dangerous. I heard many tales from Ron and Denzel describing desperate situations when their platoon was surrounded and snipers would try to pick them off. Many of those stories contained some acts of incredible bravery when one of the guys had saved one or more soldiers by putting their own life on the line.
Dan Slobin related a clichΓ© story about one guy falling on a grenade to save his buddies. I've seen that in several war movies so I was pretty skeptical. But Ron later confirmed that when they were all trapped in a single room house awaiting reinforcements, a grenade smashed through the window and landed in the middle of the floor. If it had exploded it probably would have killed all of them. But one really brave guy, thinking first about his buddies threw his helmet over the grenade and jumped on top of it. Luckily the grenade was a dud and didn't explode and they threw it back through the window. But the guy who did that was my husband Dave. That's when I really began to understand the bond between these men.
Dave told me very few of the war stories. He didn't want to appear to be looking for sympathy or bragging as some men do -- generally not the ones who actually fought. But he did tell me one important story that explained much about the guys and their lives after the war.
Fallujah in 2006 was a hell-hole. Multiple armies and tribes were fighting each other for unclear reasons. Dave's platoon was assigned to work with an Iraqi platoon and teach them how to use a rocket launcher. In the midst of their lesson, the Iraqis were suddenly aiming their guns at the Americans and commanding them to drop their weapons and walk away from their firebase. They never did determine whether the bandits were actual Iraqi soldiers who had turned, or a bunch of mujahedeen that had stolen army uniforms.
They were marched several miles to a makeshift prison in a small town and forced into one small room. They lived there for several days -- literally sleeping on top of one another. They used a belt buckle to dig a hole in the corner where they would piss and shit. Because they all knew each other very well and had years of shared stories to retell, they somehow maintained their sanity.
Denzel had picked up a bit of Arabic and constantly tried to monitor what their jailers were talking about. One day, he suddenly stiffened. "I think they want to kill us now", he stammered. Sure enough, the door was opened minutes later and they were ordered to march out. When they got outdoors the jailers paused to organize themselves for the march to their destination. The Americans took the moment to orient themselves and tried to find a way out. One guy was quicker than the others.
Charlie Carson leaped on a young jailer and wrestled the gun away from him. "Everybody run!" he screamed. He swung the gun toward the other jailers and opened fire, killing several of them. He saw that his buddies had started running east out of town, so he ran west into the town, firing the gun repeatedly. The remaining frustrated jailers chased after him -- ignoring the other 5 Americans running away. As the escaped soldiers ran, they heard bursts of gunfire in the town for several minutes, then silence, then a loud victory cheer by a crowd of people.
Knowing they couldn't outrun vehicles across the open land, they went to ground in a cement-covered drainage ditch -- actually a sewage ditch. The confused Iraqis didn't find them and when darkness fell, the 5 stinking bodies crawled away into the night. They had walked at least 10 miles before one of them collapsed. They had all not eaten for days. They picked him up and did a two-man carry for another mile. Then the carriers collapsed. The two remaining ambulatory decided to stay with the group and face the consequences with them. (I heard this story separately from all 5 of the guys over several years. No one ever identified who had collapsed and who remained.)
Their luck changed at dawn when an American reconnaissance unit ran across them -- almost literally. They were evacuated to Baghdad and then flown to Ramstien airbase in Germany for medical treatment and psychological recovery. Since they had only 2 months left in their hitch, they were all honorably discharged and returned home -- all except Charlie.
When they got home they found that none of them had jobs, but they had some money since they hadn't had much opportunity to spend their pay in Iraq. Dave had applied for a job at the local trucking and warehouse company, and found the place a disorganized mess. The man who interviewed him just complained about the stupid owners and admitted he was also out looking for a new job.
Dave's organization skills kicked right in. He researched the firm and learned they had been losing money for years and the owners had tried to sell it -- with no success. He convinced his buddies to each pitch in some money and went to the owners with a proposal. They would buy the business with the cash and a promissory note to pay most of the purchase price over the next 5 years. The desperate owners accepted and walked out the door.
Since the ex-soldiers had seen army logistics up close, they reorganized the business to be more efficient and expanded their services for customers. Most of the existing employees agreed to stay on at half wages for one year so the company, and their jobs, could survive. They changed the company name to Carson Logistics and installed a memorial to Charlie by the front door.
Steve used his considerable selling skills to find new customers. One local manufacturer had been shipping its products all over the country in its own trucks and was frustrated with the task of coordinating a hundred trucks and more hundreds of shipments to more hundreds of customers. Steve and Dave created a business proposal that took all of the logistical headaches away from the customer and provided excellent, reliable transportation service. Part of the price for the service was the fleet of a hundred trucks that could then be used for other customers.