I try to post a story every 4th, to honor those who've served. This one cuts a little closer to the bone than most. The usual shoutout to Rick at Bluedevil, who gives me good ideas and I hope you all enjoy - DT
*****
WE'LL GO NO MORE A ROVING
It was pitch-dark as a 160th Special Operations "Night Stalker" MH-53J Pave-Low ghosted in and fast-roped three squads of special operators down to the Iraqi desert floor. I was covering the action in an AH-1E Cobra.
I was a thirty-eight-year-old CW2 Army Reserve snake-driver, called up because Saddam got greedy. It was my first real combat mission and I was excited. I had been flying the Cobra since my active service days. But until the call-up for Desert Storm, the most perilous place I'd ever invaded was the tropical island of Granada.
The AH-1E was an upgunned version of the old Vietnam era Huey Cobra. The three-barreled M197 20 mm Gatling put out 700 rounds per minute and the two M261-19 tubes under its stubby "wings" spewed gales of 2.75-inch rockets. Needless to say, my snake could deal out serious hurt.
The mission was supposed to be clandestine. At least, that's what the people at CENTCOM had in mind. So, you'd think they would have noticed the regiment of Republican Guard parked in the drop zone. Still, as they say, military intelligence is to intelligence as military music is to music.
The Iraqis came swarming out of their bivouac like ants out of a kicked over anthill. The Night Stalker in the Chinook had guts. He saw that he'd just deposited twenty-seven snake eaters in the middle of a thousand utterly astonished Iraqis and he hurriedly landed; ramp down.
Our guys needed time to board. I bought it for them. The Cobra's rockets and fragmentation rounds kicked up a sandstorm as they walked through the Iraqis. Their return fire felt like I was on the receiving end of a Fourth of July celebration. An RPG eventually got my tail rotor and the snake began to spin down like a sycamore seed.
I saw the Chinook lift off. But there was no way out for me. My last thought was, "Jane."
*****
I joined the Army because I was an unmotivated loser. I'd spent four years working to a single goal - graduation. I hadn't thought through any next steps. A lot of kids are like that. They don't have a clue about adult life. So, they just plod along like they're nine years old, waiting for somebody to tell them what to do.
I chose general studies because I didn't want the education process to get in the way of my gaming and smoking the ganja. The problem was that employers are not exactly beating down the door to hire kids with a bachelor's degree in nothing useful.
I spent the summer after graduation hanging out with my old gang. Then my parents started asking me uncomfortable questions like, "How do you plan to support yourself?" They reinforced their message by cutting off my money supply.
My friends got tired of me sponging off them and so at the end of the summer I drifted into a recruiter's office. I liked easy answers back then. I figured I could kick the can down the road far enough to grow up a little.
The Army was not a popular choice in the post-Vietnam era, and they were having a hard time filling their quotas. My score on the ASVAB rang the bell. So, they gave me my choice of specializations. I was a college grad and I had also gotten a ninety-seven on the Army's Flight Aptitude Selection Test. Of course, I signed on the dotted line for Army Aviation. How cool was that??!!
The first three weeks were rough. But I was six-two and a hundred-and-ninety-pounds of hunka-hunka-burnin' love back then. The physical part was no problem. But, the lack of sleep nearly killed me. I actually enjoyed being told what to do, usually at the top of a beefy sergeant's lungs. I really had no alternative anyhow. So, I threw myself into becoming all I could be - to coin a phrase.
After ten weeks of Basic and six more of Warrant Officer Candidate school. I found myself at Fort Rucker. My fledgling ten months in flight training taught me a few important things. First and foremost, I discovered that I wasn't a total waste of oxygen. I could do things that I had never guessed I could do.
That experience helped me see where I fit in. I had better than normal vision and my nerd-like obsession with technical detail made me an excellent rotary wing pilot. I knew that I was accomplishing something meaningful. And because of that, I didn't feel like such an unmotivated loser.
Now, suddenly I had respect. I could fly a helicopter with the best. That really was the first time that I viewed myself as a worthwhile human being, and perhaps my lack of self-esteem was what had inspired my extensive assortment of bad habits.
The Army gave me a choice of airframes and there was an AH-1 Cobra attack helicopter slot open. I was top of the class, So, I grabbed it. I mean, what isn't there to love about an aircraft that packs a multi-barrel Gatling and pods full of Hydra rockets. It took some time to get up to speed. Then I was assigned to the 229th Aviation Brigade at Fort Campbell. It was part of the 101st back then.
The senior guys called us new WOs "spots" as in, "Put my coffee in that spot, son." But I was a genuine army aviator and I was totally full of myself. What did I know back then? I had only just turned 23.
The 1980s were a boring time to be a snake driver. My only "combat" experience was on the island of Grenada. The rest of it was practice and drill. We rehearsed every type of joint operation and of course we honed our flying skills.
I got the automatic bump up to CW-2 after a year. It took me out of my role as squadron manservant and brought me a nice increase in flight pay. I did the minimum six years and then transitioned into the reserves. I had been in for a total of seven and a half years. But those years had changed me from a boy into an almost 29-year-old man; with a basic sense of purpose. I could thank the Army for that.
More importantly, I knew how to take control of my future. I liked mentoring and leadership. College teaching seemed like the best way to live that life. It was familiar territory for me, and it paid a lot better than Army aviation. It also gave me tons of personal freedom.
I got a veteran's-preference, fast-track doctorate in business from a little Institute on the Charles River. I had always been smart enough. But getting a degree from a place like Sloan would have been inconceivable back in my general studies days.
Still, there is nothing like self-discipline and six years of decision making in life-or-death situations to give you the confidence to succeed. The degree opened the door to my future, a junior faculty position at Wharton. I was king of the world at the ripe of old age of 33.
I had been teaching for two years and I had built up a cult amongst the students. A good looking, 35-year-old prof with a MIT pedigree and swashbuckling credentials had a unique cred with a certain type of student, both male and female.
Jane was one of those students. I first laid eyes on her in a graduate honors seminar on policy science. That was my area of alleged expertise. She was beyond perfection.
Every guy has an image of their ideal mate. It's a compilation of experiences, tastes and desires and it's different for every man. Sitting in front of me was a woman who ticked every one of my personal boxes.
She had a flawless, perfectly proportioned face. She was wearing an expensive and very tasteful outfit. And more pertinently she had a body that you wouldn't imagine existed in the physical universe; only your fevered dreams.
My attraction to her was instantaneous and absolute. I wanted her in "that" way. Of course, I knew "that" way was totally out of the question.
The university had a strict "fraternization" policy and I would've found myself out on the street without references if anybody guessed what was going on in my mind. So, the shields slammed down, and I was a rock and an island; impervious to the threat that this unearthly beauty represented.
Unfortunately, Jane sat in my class for an hour a day three days a week. And, it was hard to breath around her, let alone interact. So, I couldn't bring myself to call on her, even when she had a question. I know that sounds weird. But that was the effect she had on me, and it was my only way of coping.
Worse, I had to do an individual "working" session with her each month. It was an honors class and I was supposed to give every student personal feedback. I might have been a little too hard on Jane during those meetings. But it was pure agony staying intellectually detached with the erotic scent of her perfume wafting around me.
So, she and I struggled through distant conversations and outright irritation, garnished with a subtext of pure yearning. She was used to men laying themselves at her feet. And my lack of responsiveness was read as cold, arrogant, patronizing S.O.B. In return she was a total raging bitch.
The semester ended and the summer began. Jane graduated. So, she was fair game. But she was also out of my life. Still, I couldn't stop thinking about her. I kept telling myself that she was a canoe and I should move on. But I wasn't kidding myself. I knew that I would regret it for the rest of my life if I didn't at least try.
So, after a few surreptitious inquiries I found out that she lived above a watering hole near the Penn campus and that she hung out there most nights. I put on my best "older dude hanging around a college bar without trying to look too much like a pervert" duds, white linen shirt, whip cord khaki pants and an old Harris Tweed sport coat. That coat had been my comfort blanket for as long as I could remember.
Then I hopped into my Mustang and went down to the bar. Of COURSE, Jane wasn't there. There is no comparable experience to standing around a neighborhood watering-hole while the locals check you out. I hesitated, trying to figure out where to sit.
Luckily several of my former students were at one table and they called me over. We sat under the brick arches and killed several pitchers while we discussed international market positions for emerging technologies and other fascinating topics.
Nobody but a Wharton student could be that nerdy.
It was getting late and Jane hadn't showed. I was ready to drop four twenties in the pot when she made an appearance. Unfortunately, she was clinging to the hand of the Greek god Adonis himself.
I don't know where she found a dude like that. He was so perfect he didn't look real. Maybe she bought him directly off the pages of GQ?
I have always been a believer in the benefit of situational awareness, and this was a great chance to scope out the competition. The two of them made their way over to a private table in the corner. I sat back down and ordered another pitcher.
My table was full of students. It made excellent camouflage. I was only ten years older, so I blended right in. Not that I needed cover since those two were so clearly into each other that there was nobody else in the room.