The
boat crawled towards the coast with all six men straining to pick up
any sound that could be heard over the growl of the twin diesels.
Gunners Mates Jeff Ties and Alvin Jordan had the most important jobs;
namely to blast any harbor patrol bastards that might blunder into
them. Greenwood was given two machinist’s mates because the engines
were not entirely trustworthy. Also: when you’re on an unfamiliar
boat, its good to have mechanically inclined people in more than one
spot to help figure things out. Then there was the communications
specialist. His job was to make contact with the leader of the group
they would be picking up. A great humanitarian and all around swell
guy by the name of Colonel Nguyen Quoc Cuong.
The specialist’s name was
Sappington, and he was the only man who had never been on a fast
attack boat of any kind. He was the oldest man present; maybe thirty
or thirty-five. He came off as a bit cold in the minds of the other
small boat men, but he had a neat little radio that wasn’t any
bigger than a wallet, and he made the claim that someday soon
everyone in the states would be carrying one. Anyway, he was the man
with the code lingo, which was almost as important as the fog that
made this run possible.
Greenwood had naturally asked
why the higher ups hadn’t scrounged for a boat pilot from the now
captured bases at Rach Soi or Kien An. It was claimed that they
couldn’t find any skippers with open water navigational skills that
were up to this job. Greenwood was hard pressed to doubt them. Even
with the all important fog their LST
had to launch twenty miles out from the mouth of the Cai Lon River.
River piloting was child’s play compared to the approach their
picket boat would have to make. True, they had a radar unit that
would help them once they got within three to four miles of the river
entrance. But they needed a straight approach to that point, and he
was pretty good at calculating cross currents.
Greenwood also suspected that
they wanted a pilot who spoke Vietnamese, but couldn’t possibly
turn out to be a Commie. The man they were going in to pick up was
important. Not important enough to get picked up in Saigon, but worth
a lot of fuss just the same.
“Well, he damn well
better be punctual,” the
pilot thought to himself while altering his compass heading after
another glance at this watch.
The magic formula for their
blind approach consisted of three things: minutes traveled on a
specific compass heading, course changes at specific times and boat
speed. At one point during the approach the skipper had buzzed the
engine compartment and asked, “Beazek, what’s wrong with the
throttle? The r.p.m.s aren’t holding steady.”
“Well sir, they’re bound
to fluctuate a tad. But I’m pretty sure the throttle won’t stick
on us.”
“That’s not my concern.
We can’t compensate for these currents if we don’t have a
consistent speed.”
“Sorry sir, but I’ve
never been in a situation where it hurt to have the throttle wander a
bit,” said Machinist Mate Darrel Beazek.”
“Well you’re in one now,”
the skipper responded.
Beazek took out some more
hard candy and gave a piece to his partner before loading up himself.
It was Asian coffee candy with a very high caffeine content. Beazek
was a tad out of shape and depended mightily on caffeine and sugar.
His partner was a skinny black kid of eighteen named George Williams.
Both men knew engines, but only Beazek had enough experience to know
that officers always want more than they actually need.
“If we don’t line up
perfect on the mouth of the river, it won’t matter as long as the
fog holds---right?” inquired Williams.
“Sort of,” responded
Beazek. “Nobody on this boat has ever worked this coastline. Oh
we’ll find our way alright, but how much time will we waste in the
process? That is the question.
The kid grinned sheepishly to
himself.
“To tell you the truth, I
feel like a fool being in the middle of all this.”
“Don’t we all…..but
what’s your
brand of
dumb shit thinking?”
“I like working on engines,
and I figured that a G.I. Bill would really help me afterward so I
enlisted and put in for machinist school. But I didn’t care much
for the idea of staying down in the bottom part of a big ship for
years on end, so I volunteered for Mobile Ravine. I figured I’d
just end up cruising around someplace pretty safe cause the war is
over and we probably wouldn’t get into another fight for a long
spell,” reasoned the kid.
“I never figured that for a
second,” responded Beazek. “We gave the South Vietnamese
government a solemn pledge to come back if the Commies ever launched
a full scale invasion. It’s plain enough we aren’t going to honor
that promise, but back when you were in boot camp, the rest of us
were sweating blood that we’d be ordered back in to face longer and
hotter river gauntlets.”
The black kid shook his head.
“I got a cousin who’s on
the supply side of this navy and he told me that the South Vietnamese
military machine has been getting cheated out of supplies by us for
the past two years. Not a big surprise to those in the
know, that
the Commies would win out eventually. Then or now, I would have bet
my autograph of Jimmy Hendricks that I’d never ride a boat on a
Vietnamese river, or any other in Southeast Asia.”
“So they didn’t give you
a choice in the matter?” asked Beazek.
“Did they give you
one?”
responded Williams.
“No, but I got experience.
They always want that for a special op.”
“Well anyway, Jordan told
me that we’re cutting through fresh water now so we must be pretty
close.”
“Dunno. They say that you
can scoop up a bucket of fresh water ten miles out from the mouth of
the Amazon
River.”
“Yea, but the Cai Lon is
smaller, although I never saw any photos of it.”
Above their heads Sappington
moved over beside Greenwood so that his voice wouldn’t carry.
He pointed to a tiny window
on his wonder box and said, “I’ll get a flashing light when we’re
within one-hundred yards of our contact. Just try to put us as close
to the docks on the right side as you can.”
Two minutes later the boat
scraped alongside the end of a pier and everyone tensed, especially
the machinists who were afraid for the thin piece of wood between
them and the water.
“I guess we’re close
enough to the right,” muttered Greenwood as he lowered the r.p.m.s
a bit more.
“I thought there was
supposed to be lights at the entrance to this docking facility,”
Sappington whispered in a rush.
“I was informed that a
power failure would be arranged around 0300 hours,” said Greenwood.
“You’ll appreciate that more when its time to take our guests
aboard.”
“Yea, but your damn engines
could still draw unwelcome attention,” put in the specialist.
Now Greenwood was absolutely
convinced that this man was more than just a radio operator with a
new toy. He was probably some kind of spook,
not that it
mattered a whole lot.
“Hopefully everyone who is
sleeping on their boats will mind their own business. That is the
only good thing about a communist take over: it tends to quiet people
down,” the skipper theorized.
The boat crept along for
another five minutes with the men topside staring warily at the
silhouettes of boats and boat houses that were only partially
obscured by the fog. Jordan swore he saw a man standing at the end of
a dock staring right at them, but the man didn’t move and he
probably thought they were N.V.N. Besides the fog, their best playing
card was the fact that the new management was awfully busy trying to
figure out who needed to be oppressed and in what order.
Because the local population
was largely Khmer
refugees
who had relocated to the Kien Giang Provence, the newly arrived
Communist occupation forces received very little in the way of
cooperation. For that reason, the lives of half a dozen men hung
largely on two possibilities: 1) That the boat people who were now
listening to the rumble of an engine would conclude that a kindred
spirit was in the process of defying the new authorities. 2) That a
communist patrol boat was passing by looking for someone to arrest.
Either way, Greenwood was
mostly concerned with the danger of damaging his hull in the damn fog
and finding himself marooned in enemy territory. If it had been up to
him, he would come in alone in a rubber zodiac boat. That way he
could bounce off of piers to his heart’s content. Only drawback was
that it would only take a few 7.62 rounds to put everybody into the
soup.
Such thoughts were shoved
aside when Sappington got his little flashy light fifteen-hundred
yards from where they scratched the paint job on the boat. Greenwood
let the boat run softly aground in section of river bank that had yet
to be developed. Greenwood could smell the port city that was all
around them, and he heard a dog barking maybe two-hundred yards
straight in.
Their situation was
absolutely ridiculous, but not nearly as much as it would be if they
were conducting the same kind of operation on the east coast. That
was where
the important people struggled to get out of the country. The people
on this side
had blood ties with Cambodia and were amongst the poorest of the
residents of Viet Nam. They had received some help from the United
States, but now, they would be at the mercy of an unorganized
authority that would see them as illegal aliens more than anything.
Sappington stood on the bow
of the boat and cast a flashlight beam that swung back and forth
between the two nearest docks that were well spread apart because of
a small tributary that was only knee deep but fairly wide. Five
minutes passes and gunners were growing more and more nervous by the
minute. But Greenwood handed them some gum and soon thereafter a man
waded in out of the fog and rewarded them for their patience.
Sappington kept his
flashlight beam in the man’s face, and he had transferred his Colt
pistol from its flap holster to his pants belt for faster drawing if
necessary. But the man wearing civilian clothing was quick to offer
up a large envelope that was quite possibly his ticket to ride.
Sappington took it and walked the man back to where the skipper was
waiting.
“I was told there would be
five or six of you,” Greenwood said in Vietnamese.
“We had to disperse earlier
in the night. Only the envelope matters. Now get us out of here.”
There
was something about the colonel that rubbed Greenwood the wrong way,
but that probably had something to do with the fact that thousands of
friends and relatives were being written off by people who were being
forced to play God.
Greenwood
had been told that the colonel would be making his way from the
central commerce city of Long
Xuyen. Apparently
the move did not go without incident. Wherever his comrades were, the
Americans could only assume that they parted company with Cuong of
their own free wills.
The colonel was covered in
mud and was likely pretty tired. But his predatory gazed never left
the fog enshrouded bank for more than an instant while whispering
answers to Sappington’s questions. The American JG
was content
to leave the men to their business while getting the boat turned
around. They then back tracked on their entry route since the length
of the piers on that side were now known to them.
They almost made it out of
the river before a distant voice called, “Boat
37, is that you?”
Greenwood dared not answer
because his American accent would have given them away. But the
colonel fired back with, “No, this is boat 18. We pulled into the
wrong damn river. This damn fog is going to drive me to drink!”
The engines drowned out the
distant response as Greenwood gave the boat some more throttle.
Nobody stopped sweating until they were out in open water and their
radar showed an empty screen. At that point there was a lot of water
between them and the mother ship, but after years of being shot at
from riverbanks, the run from the coast would seem like a piece of
cake indeed.
Greenwood broke radio silence
and reported that the mission had gone off without a hitch. Only one
man had been rescued but that was the Colonel’s problem if it was a
problem at all. But the mother ship’s response was a bit less
joyful.
“Beaver One, be advised
that we have a blip on long range radar. Possible PT boat heading
towards us from the south.”
“Say
again Mother
Hubbard. Is
the bogey south of your location?” asked Greenwood.
“Affirmative. Vessel is
approaching from the south. We will break out of the fog by sailing
north by northwest. We have an Albatross ready to assist us in the
open. Suggest you sail north on a parallel course with the coast
until further notice.
“Understood Mother
Hubbard, but
it is very unlikely that your bogey is a PT boat. All such patrol
craft should be north
of these
waters.”
“We will keep you
informed, Mother Hubbard out.”
The skipper shook his head
and asked, “Sappington, any chance that a special boat might be on
the way out to our tender
for the
purpose of picking up the Colonel? We got a possible NVN PT boat
approaching from the south.”
“The Colonel is supposed to
stay with the ship all the way back to Singapore. As for the PT boat
theory: you know more than I do about the NVN, but I was told that
there are no small boat bases south of Rach Soi.”
“You know that, and I know
that, but Lt. Commander Norland is now going to run away from what he
thinks is a PT boat. So, we’ll have to head north and wait for
Norland’s little mystery to clear up.”
“Trouble is the fog is
clearing up even faster,” complained the special operative.
Greenwood
turned ninety degrees to starboard and aimed his boat at waters that
were sure to get crowded sooner or later. By 0700 the last of the fog
had burned away and Greenwood was fast approaching a dilemma. Dead
ahead was a peninsula that featured a coastal beacon. The place was
called Cape Hon
Chong, and
it was there to protect ships from a chain of small Islands and reefs
that lay just off to the west. But the NVA installed a coastal
battery because the area had a history of Cambodian pirate activity.
Of course the NVA wasn’t
losing any sleep over the fact that refugees bound for Thailand might
fall prey to those wolves of the sea. Their concern was that
smugglers could get rich shipping contraband merchandise down from
Bangkok.
Refugees
were deemed undesirable, and were often ignored by the North
Vietnamese authorities if the former had the good sense not to flaunt
their illegal activities in front of the later.
A
good example of that took place that morning of the 6th.
A forty foot open boat tried to make use of the heavy fog in order to
get past Hon
Chong. But
their antiquated twenty-five horse outboard broke down and by the
time they got it fixed, the fog had burned off leaving them only
three-thousand yards from the shore installation. The gunners could
hardly ignore the criminals bobbing out on the ocean in front of
them, so the order was given to open fire.
A
40mm round kicked up a geyser of water some ten yards inbound from
the boat. The man operating the outboard began steering a zigzag
course which would keep them in range longer but also make things a
bit trickier for the gunners. Greenwood waited for additional rounds
to fall and was a bit mystified when that didn’t happen. What the
naval officer couldn’t know was that the 40mm was having mechanical
troubles. Its normal four round semi-auto feature was not working and
the gun had to loaded and fired one round at a time.
Greenwood
positioned his boat five-hundred yards directly behind the refugee
craft and monitored the drama as it unfolded. Eight more rounds fell
into the sea before the Vietnamese colonel left the box he was
sitting on and approached the skipper.
“Lieutenant, it is my
opinion that you are needlessly endangering your vessel. That shore
gun could possibly throw a round out this far.”
Greenwood ignored him and
called down to the engine compartment.
“Beazek, did you see to
that smudge
pot like I
told you?”
Oh yes sir. A smoke screen is
a man’s best friend when you gotta—-“
“Just be ready to deploy on
my order,” interrupted the skipper.
“You’re not going to
place this boat between the shore battery and its target,” the
colonel stated with the certainty of a higher rank. “You have
orders to get me to the recovery ship and this
unfortunate
matter cannot be your concern.”
“Colonel, my concern
is that
we’re leaving this part of Asia with our tail between our legs. Now
please sit down and don’t distract me anymore.”
The Vietnamese officer went
to stand over Sappington where he was seated and asked, “Are you
not going to protest this unseemly conduct? This is a very important
mission, and it is being willfully jeopardized.”
“Agreed, Colonel. I suggest
we allow the smoke screen to be deployed and then insist that we
rendezvous with the LST a.s.a.p.”
“And I say we leave this
area without
deploying a
smoke screen!” shouted the officer so that Greenwood could hear.
Suddenly the nearest twin .50
was pointed in their direction.
Gunners Mate Jeff Ties gave
them a most insincere look and said, “Begging your pardon, Colonel.
I was just testing the runners to make sure the guns could turn
properly.”
Then the big machine guns
turned back towards the sea.
Jordon missed what the other
gunner had said but understood that they now had something extra to
think about. Williams was sent astern to man the smoke generator and
the boat hooked around in a huge half circle to make a run from east
to west. There were only sixteen people on the underpowered open
boat. In the future, boats the same size would carry three times that
number. The world would read about it in the newspapers and wonder
why anyone could fear communism so much.
Greenwood and the others were
getting a rough idea. Now it was time to demonstrate a different way
of thinking. The engines came to full life and the high speed boat
commenced its run just after another geyser erupted. A black cloud
grew out of the boat’s stern and Greenwood was thankful that the
cloak of soot was drifting straight at the gun emplacement. The
skipper grinned at his handiwork and was about to turn and head off
in the general direction of the LST. But suddenly there was a dull
thud and a chorus of feint screams.
Greenwood raised his glasses
and saw that the shore battery finally got in a lucky shot. The 40mm
round obliterated the outboard and sprayed the helmsman and three
others with shrapnel. The boat was now taking water from numerous
small leaks, but the only thing that mattered was that it was dead in
the water, and would eventually drift towards shore. (Assuming that
the gunners allowed it to stay afloat long enough.)
Greenwood stared across the
expanse of water and envisioned an entire country that had been
written off because the politicians back in Washington didn’t know
how to fight a war. A lot of anger came to a head and the throttle
was pushed wide open for the second time. Colonel Cuong tensed at
this latest absurdity as did Sappington, but they weren’t prepared
to relieve the skipper of his command and nothing less would have
gotten the boat turned around.
It seemed to take forever for
the two boats to get lined up for a tow, and in the meantime the
shore gunners managed to activate a 20mm that required a high arch
trajectory but could lay down a pattern of random shots. Greenwood
figured that out while approaching the stern with a tow line.
Williams stood ready to accept the coil of tow line but the skipper
kept it and tossed it to a man waiting at the bow of the other boat.
The refugee was just in the process of securing his end of the line
when a 20mm shell took his head clean off.
Everyone pushed away from the
decapitated corpse and the tow line began to slip back off of the
boat. A man who had been sitting in the center of the craft forced
his way between to hysterical women and made for the snaking length
of nylon. That’s when things went from bad to worse. The next 40mm
round plowed through the gunwale at water level. A millisecond later
it cut through both the man’s legs just below the kneecaps and sent
another wave of hysteria through the now sinking boat.
“Aw crap,” exclaimed the
skipper who then rushed back to the helm and brought the two boats
together.
The instant the boats met
Williams jumped onto the other boat and secured it. Then he turned
expectantly towards his skipper and shouted, “We taking them all
sir!?”
“Everybody who’s got a
pulse!” bellowed the officer over the wailing of women and
children. “Hand over the kids first!”
Half a dozen more 40mm rounds
dropped off to starboard before everyone could be carried to the
picket boat. Even the colonel lent a hand when he realized that it
was in his best interest to get the work done faster. A 20mm hit was
scored on the control cabin, but every other round fell short of the
picket and continued to spray the refugees as they filed clumsily
past Williams on their way forward. Three men still on their feet,
five women and six children.
Greenwood ordered them to sit
down with their legs folded in on the aft deck. He didn’t have time
to place anyone in a nook or cranny where they wouldn’t interfere
with the operation of the boat. Greenwood thought he heard the
colonel complaining or threatening or something. His command of the
Vietnamese language only went so far with people scared out of their
minds, but he kept shouting that everything was going to be alright
as some of the women and children continued to vent their fears.
Then came the cruelest cut of
all. Greenwood was about to order Jordan to cut the line as Williams
poised to launch himself back onto U.S. government property. The kid
was only three feet away from his skipper, and everyone had gotten
used to the idea that the joining spot between the two boats was kind
of sacred, because it was a place that had been traversed by every
refugee and half the attack boat crew. But suddenly an invisible hand
swept the skinny kid off the sinking boat and into the water.
Greenwood dived in without
hesitation and grabbed hold of the back of the kid’s Mae
West. The
colonel rushed into the control cabin when another 20mm flew in and
took a women in the throat. He was still scanning the controls when
Ties slugged him over the head with his pistol butt.
Jordan got the Skipper and
Williams back onto the boat and then yelled for Ties to go ahead and
open her up. Greenwood had focused entirely on the task of getting
the kid out of the water. Only when he cleared the salt water out of
his eyes did he realize that Williams never had a chance. The 20mm
had ripped out his heart and spinal column.
Three hours later they were
all aboard the LST, and Lt.Com. Norland ranted and raved about
Greenwood’s incompetence for a long time before bothering to
mention that the PT boat he had run away from was a marine research
craft who’s crew thought they were far enough outside the communist
sphere of influence. There was plenty of embarrassment to go around,
but since small boat skippers weren’t in great demand at that time,
the Brass
was free to
embrace regulations and remind everyone that when you go on a special
op, you damn well better stay focused on what is expected of you.
Greenwood took full
responsibility for all that happened and put up a minimal defense at
his courts martial. Somewhere in the Gulf of Thailand he stopped play
acting the role of a bureaucrat. For years he honestly thought the
rules and regulations could be the framework of his life. But now he
knew different. He didn’t really feel like going home, but it would
give his wife a chance to make her dream come true, so he put on
civilian clothing and headed for a drier climate.
Life wasn’t going to be
perfect without a twenty year pension. Dreams had to be altered and
Herb moved his wife into an apartment over a convenience store owned
by a fellow Paiute who had also been in the Navy. He went through the
motions of becoming a math teacher somewhere in the Las Vegas area,
but his service record tended to create a bit of drag while competing
against hundreds of specialty degree applicants from all over the
country. Yes, it seemed like half the country wanted to go into
teaching; and all of the schools wanted their students to at least
consider that particular career path. Herb didn’t mind his lack of
progress until his immigrant wife began to blow his doors off in the
area of wage earning.
Nhu appreciated her husband’s
problem. He had lost his career because he was just a bit more
idealistic than the United States government could tolerate. No one
was at fault really. You can’t run a military with people who can’t
consistently follow orders. So Herb would find something to do and
everything would turn out alright in the long run.
It did in a way. Nhu got a
job as a dealer in one of the bigger casinos and Herb ended up
teaching as part of an adult education program that was a division of
the tribal health and human services department. But there was a
strange hollow spot inside of him, and he had to contend with a
growing demon that materialized every time some well meaning resident
voiced his belief that Herb had gotten a raw deal from the Navy.
Then after twelve years, Nhu
became the assistant manager of the casino and would wait no more for
the house she always wanted. It was a few miles off of tribal land
and Herb soon found excuses to take a friendly drink, even though he
had never touched the stuff back in Nam.
After
another year of living the American Dream, Nhu and Herb were
separated and Herb was beginning to foul up at work because of the
drinking. That’s when Albert Sappington came back into Herb’s
life; and at the time, it really did
look as
though it would be a good thing for the man who had left a part of
himself on the ocean.
They met in the parking lot
of a bar that was located on the edge of what Herb called “Glitter
Town.” Some people might comment that Vegas could be described in
terms of population density. The highest density was Herb’s Glitter
Town where people came to have fun or find work. Then there was the
residential community. Then there was the outskirts where you could
let you dog run free or play a round of cheap golf. Herb couldn’t
really complain. He had seen other tribal lands where there was
nothing but shacks, junked cars and drifting sands.
Still, something had
compelled him to leave the place of his birth and now that he was
back home, he was rediscovering a life long melancholy. That combined
with his failure in the service, pretty much primed him for what
Sappington had in mind for him. When the government agent extended
his hand in greeting, Herb didn’t know if he should shake it or
break the man’s thumb. But a little voice told him not to start any
trouble in a favorite watering hole, so Sappington was allowed to buy
the drinks, and Herb would get him mind off his soon to be ex-wife
for a while.
“How would you like to make
ten-thousand dollars tax free?” Sappington asked with his usual
lack of style.
“Do I have to work with
you, or just work like
you?”
Herb responded with his own lack of diplomacy.
“The U.S. companies that
work abroad would like you to go to sea again. Different ocean this
time.”
“That doesn’t sound like
a few days work to me, and waters I’m unfamiliar with seem to bring
me bad luck.”
“I don’t know how you can
say that. We had shells coming at us six ways to Sunday but we got
through it,” the G-man said with a friendly smile.
“Not everybody,” Herb
muttered into his drink.
“I thought we were talking
about your
luck,”
the recruiter said before ordering another round.
“A year ago I would have
told you to go to hell. But now I’m willing to have one more drink
and listen to what you have to say before I’m finished. So its time
for you to make your pitch.”
“Ok, it goes like this:
Have you ever heard of The
Gulf of Aden?”
“Yea. Studied a lot of
geography in the Navy. Thought it might come in handy after Nam.”
“Well,
we want you to go to work there. You and a man named Cory Decker will
sail an old yacht off the coast of Puntland.
That’s a
coastal region of Somalia.”
“So what are we supposed to
do on this old yacht?”
“There is a ninety percent
probability that you won’t do anything except cruise a day or so
near the Arabian
Sea and
then tie up, collect your money and go home.”
“That leaves you to
describe the remaining ten percent.”
“Do you know what Q
Ships were
back in WWI?”
“Yea. They were small
Allied ships not worth spending a torpedo on. So a German U Boat
would surface and order the crew into life rafts so they could sink
the ship with their deck gun. But the ship’s crew would have a
surprise for the Krauts. They would have disguised gun batteries that
would be brought out and the U Boat would get clobbered.”
“Correct. Now the fact is
The Sea Of
Aden used
to be plagued by pirates; for many centuries in fact. That pretty
much ended with modern times, but now one of the world’s oldest
professions is returning to that area.”
“Which you were talking
about prostitution,” Herb muttered.
“Some of the Somali have
taken to speed boats and have begun to kidnap wealthy people who
cruise through those waters. They hold them for ransom. It looks like
the situation might be escalating. Oil people are becoming interested
in Puntland. They’re thinking about exploring for oil both on and
off shore. Countless ships ply the coast and would have to exhaust
fuel needlessly in order to stay clear of the area. Lots of people
want this kidnapping thing nipped in the bud.”
“Tell them to put a 20mm on
each ship and give some of the crew combat pay if they have to do any
shooting,” advised Greenwood.”
“You know better than that,
as an ex-navy man,” the recruiter gently scolded. “Just one case
of mistaken identity and the company owning the ship could lose a
fortune in court.”
“Mistaken identity my ass,”
retorted Herb. “When a ship is doing eighteen knots and some clown
tries to board it from another craft, you got yourself a hostile
action. Only a fool could see it any other way.”
“Just the same, folks in
the shipping business hope to address this issue with special
contactors who will sail on their own. That’s where the yacht comes
in.”
“An old
yacht you
said.”
“The boat was given a
facelift you might say. She looks far more expensive than she really
is.”
“The boat has to be
expendable because you’re expecting trouble,” guessed the ex Navy
officer.
“No, we purchase old boats
because we need more than one or two. You have to understand that the
pirates aren’t stupid. They have relatives who are fishermen and
those guys will take note of expensive looking boats that keep
cruising up and down the coast week after week.”
“And different men to be
seen on them?”
“Well, the
hunters are
always on board, but yes, the men who help them sail the boats tend
to come and go. Each trip lasts about three days. One day to sail
into the danger zone---one day to act as bait---and one day to get
back to your super secret docking facility. Then you can go home
unless you want another cruise.”
“That sounds like a good
plan for Lake
Superior, but
not the Arabian
Sea,”
Herb scoffed.
“The oil people aren’t
interested in the whole damn Indian Ocean. They’re interested in
Mr. Skinny’s back yard. Hopefully if we can demoralize these
people, we can get them to behave themselves.”
“Doesn’t sound to me like
you know much about pirates.”
“I’m not a hunter, Mr.
Greenwood. But if you have something useful to say on the subject I’d
be pleased to pass it along to the men who are in the thick of
things.”
“A boatman turns pirate for
one of two reasons: either because his livelihood has been taken from
him or because he likes to wield power over others. You’ll find
both kinds on the water and they all have a problem with authority.
You don’t teach these guys a lesson by putting them in jail.”
“Well, certainly not a jail
where loved ones can come and visit them. One of the interesting
facets of this operation is that the pirates we collect just sort
of----disappear.”
The recruiter smiled at his
own statement.
“When people mysteriously
vanish, it gives the next ones in line something to think about
regardless of how they feel about uniforms.”
Herb refocused on the claim
that he probably wouldn’t see any action if he only went out one
time.
“Well---I could get a week
off if you’re sure I won’t need more than that.”
“It’ll be cutting it
close but we are really short handed so I’m just about positive I
can line you up with a boat anytime you arrive. Air transportation is
available seven days a week. We can move you around like you’re a
real big shot.”
“Yea, that was one of the
cool things about the military,” admitted Herb. “You could be
flown anywhere anytime. Only problem was that sometimes guys ended up
making the return flight in a rubber bag.”
“Just so the answer is
‘yes,” thought
the recruiter as he tipped the waitress.
The term Any
Port In A Storm could
very well have been coined in Bargaal
Somalia. Until
the 1980s only sand swept earthen roads connected the tiny port
community to the parts of the country that men were willing to kill
each other to control. It’s location was considered perfect, and it
would have been easy enough to spot from the air. But you could bet
your sweet ass that at least one resident would be on retainer, to
inform the local pirates that some white folks were doing something
suspicious just down the road. Therefor it had been decided to build
Satrap 4
approximately
five miles north of the tiny port town.
One fog covered night a U.S.
Navy LST came in and dropped off a Seabee
crew that
dredged a twenty foot berthing pen for the various yachts that would
come and go. Trawlers would fuel them at sea when the coast was
(quite literally) free. Special camouflage netting would cover the
parked yacht when it was nestled in its little coastal nook. Such
modest little hide-a-ways were designed to allow the hunter yachts to
cruise the coast line with anonymity; or at least as much as they
would need until the operation could be considered a failure; and no
other outcome was possible.
Hunting pirates who live on
large sailing ships was always relatively easy. But hunting men on
speed boats who are back on land after a few hours; was another
matter entirely. The fishing communities were largely on the side of
the pirates, and the international corporations that needed use of
the waterways were looked upon as apathetic wealth that was always
going someplace else.
The pirate hunting program
that Herb had just hooked up with was bound to fail, but a few
adventurous types would make some money for a while because the
shipping companies and local governments were compelled to try
everything they could think of.
(Even things that didn’t
stand a chance.)
Herb was boated in to his
assignment at 0400, and his ride had to use a homing device because
the use of signal lights were strictly forbidden. Even in the
daylight hours you couldn’t spot the place where the yacht was
parked unless you came within fifty feet of the camo netting. Most of
the coastal area consisted of short sandy bluffs but the engineers
who had dredged out a docking stall had selected a spot that was
sandwiched between two rock formations. It helped cut down on sand
drift when the winds shifted to a coastally quarter.
As for accommodations,
everything was on the yacht. Toilet, cooking facility, and of course
sleeping bunks. Only the camo netting stood on terra firma, and that
could be taken down in three minutes. The lone occupant of the tiny
getaway wanted his meeting with his new partner to start out with a
dose of levity, so when he the shuttle boat eased up to the beach,
Cory Decker turned on a small lamp to display himself in a Japanese
bath robe with a martini glass in one hand.
“No lights outside your
cabin damn it,” grumbled the shuttle pilot.
“You’re in greater danger
of damaging your hull on a rock than you are of being spotted,”
responded Cory in a bored tone. “I gotta explain that to every guy
who sails out here.”
The man in the bathrobe then
extended a friendly hand to Herb and said, “Cory Decker at your
service. Step up on deck so you cabbie can get back underway. I’m
certain he is anxious to pick up another fare.”
The boatman didn’t respond
to that, he just silently threw his engine into reverse once his
passenger was off loaded.
After the shuttle was
swallowed by the dark Herb said, “That guy didn’t seem happy in
his work.”
“He’s the nervous type.
He keeps thinking that a speedboat full of pirates will come along
and shoot him while he’s on a run.”
“At this hour?” queried
the newcomer.
“It’s
never happened but it is theoretically
possible.”
“Is
that the only thing that was eating him?”
“No, in truth our support
people aren’t terribly crazy about guys like me.”
“Yea, shooters seem a
little spooky to regular nine to five folk. I’ve transported more
than on Special
Ops team in
my day, and when I was bringing them back, there was always a grim
sort of atmosphere on the boat.”
“Wouldn’t know anything
about that,” Cory responded with a shrug. “Want a coke?”
“Sure.”
Herb
took his drink and sat down in the stern section to get acquainted
with his new companion. Cory was twenty-six. Big but not athletic,
with short sandy hair, a weak chin and the cheesiest looking mustache
in the world. A couple of years ago he had completed a tour of duty
in the Air Force where he had served as a Munitions
Systems Specialist. That
is where he understandable interest in a weapon that became a turning
point in martial history.
“Doesn’t seem real to you
I suppose,” then put forth with a grin.
“What doesn’t?”
“The fact that in a few
hours we’re going out to find some guys we can kill.”
“I was told that our
chances of a contact were about ten percent,” said Herb.
“Oh, far less than that
under normal circumstances. But yesterday before sundown I went over
to the village and asked if they had any goat ribs I could buy. Then
I told them that I’d be sailing by their village again the day
after tomorrow if anyone was interested in making a little money
selling meat.”
“I was instructed not to
allow any locals to get a close look at us,” Greenwood said coldly.
“We are to cruise from point A to point B and under no
circumstances deviate from that plan.”
“Plan was no good Herb.
Haven’t you ever heard the expression, ‘it
pays to advertise?”
Greenwood’s dour expression
grew even more intense (if that was possible.)
“Did somebody offer you a
bonus for every kill you get?”
“Hell yea, didn’t they
tell you?”
“Must have skipped
Sappington’s mind,” Herb muttered half to himself.
“Don’t know him. I got
recruited by someone else.”
The older man let out a sigh
and said, “Look here, I’m being paid to follow instructions and
that is what I’m going to do. I suggest that we sleep in and then
you can teach me all I need to know about the boat. The day after
we’ll head for Satrap
5 and when
we get there we can discuss your ideas about advertising
with the
field supervisor. Who knows, maybe he’ll agree with you. But then
my tour will be over and I’ll be heading home.”
“You expected to get paid
for doing nothing,” Cory said with a bluntness that was almost
comic.
Herb fixed the other man with
a hard stare and said, “We are two white guys in the middle of
pirate territory. Some kid could come looking for a stray goat and
find us here. Out of the water we’re two guys with a light
machinegun until we get to our next hole in the wall. As far as I’m
concerned; that ain’t nothing.
That there
is something.”
The next day Herb got settled
into what would be his home for the next few days. The old powerboat
was a forty-eight foot cabin cruiser with ten feet of deck space fore
and aft of the cabin. Like every ocean yacht, it contained fold down
tables and various domestic features common in camping rigs. But what
really threw Herb for a loop was the stuff that Cory had been hiding
under a couple of tarps right next to where Herb had been sitting the
night before.
Herb’s eyes fairly bugged
out when the tarps came away and he found himself staring at a M134
mini gun. As far as Herb knew it was the baby of the mini gun family.
It only weighed eighty-five pounds and fired the 7.62 NATO rifle
round. The most common mini gun model was the 20mm multi cannon, but
even a maniac like Cory couldn’t hope to load such a weapon onto a
yacht without help, a prayer and a specialized deck. So he contented
himself with the 7.62.
Herb wasn’t surprised to
discover that the weapon was purchased by Cory on the black market.
It was explained to him that the other boats were equipped with war
surplus M-60 machineguns. Cory was different, and maybe that’s why
the shuttle guy didn’t like him. Well, they weren’t going near
Bargaal, so it wouldn’t make any difference to Herb.
“So the other tarp is
covering the ammo? Jez, I’m surprised we’re not lower in the
water with all that lead.”
“Actually I’ve only got a
thousand rounds. Got my other
secret
weapons laying on top of that.”
“Rockets?” guessed Herb.
“More like Rockettes,”
quipped the
younger man who was referring to dancers that went out of style
before he was born.
Cory took out a pair of
department store manikins dressed in bathing suits.
“What in the hell…”
breathed Herb.
“We’re supposed to be
rich guys on a pleasure cruise ain’t we?”
“Well yea…” Herb
responded with a befuddled look. “But when those pirates train
their field glasses on those dummies, they’ll probably notice that
they aren’t moving and get suspicious.”
Cory laughed at that and
said, “The only thing they’re gunna get is horny. Anyway, that
gun of ours can turn a boat into a sieve at eight-hundred yards or
better so you got nothing to worry about.”
Herb raised an index finger
and warned, “Hey, you will
not fire on
any boat that is more than one-hundred
yards out.
We have to be certain of their intentions and we can’t do that if
they’re half way to India.”
“Look Herb, I appreciate
the fact that you’re new to this part of the world so let me
explain something to you: Skinny’s
don’t run
around burning up gasoline in speedboats cause they’re fishing. Now
there is the
possibility that we could run into a government boat, in which you
will see uniforms and guys busting a gut to make it clear that they
are not pirates. Every guy who is legitimate in these waters
understands how important it is to not
be mistaken
for a pirate. So when bad guys show up---we’ll know it.”
“Cory, I appreciate your
line of reasoning but I want your promise that unless somebody goes
for a weapon you will not shoot to kill before I’ve had a chance to
speak with them.”
“Well what other kind of
shooting do you think I’d be doing with a mini gun?” growled
Herb’s partner.
“You could blow up a wall
of water with a gun like that. Scare the shit out of them and make
them think twice about opening up on us.”
“I don’t think appreciate
the limitations of my set up,” responded Cory. “This weapon will
super heat in three seconds. It isn’t for firing warning shots. You
got the bull horn. You can start begging them to surrender any time
you want. But they will NOT get close enough to try any boarding
tricks. You’re problem Herb is that you don’t understand just how
fast these things can happen. They know damn well they can’t give
us time to think about anything.”
Herb could feel the tension
that suddenly existed between them. Cory was obviously an easy going
man by nature, but now it was equally obvious that he wasn’t going
to take even the slightest gamble with his life in order to avoid
blood shed. The man from Nevada wasn’t entirely surprised to
discover that he was on the wrong boat….again.
On
the morning they were to pull out, Cory fired up the old Volvo diesel
and they crept out of their hiding place like a man sneaking out of a
married woman’s house. Herb took the helm (and not just because
Cory was supposed to ride shotgun.) Herb wanted to show his partner
that when he said they were heading away from the village, he really
meant it. Cory didn’t argue. He would be cruising these waters for
quite a while and he didn’t want the people he was working for to
think that he couldn’t get along with others.
“Mind some music?” he
asked innocently enough.
“Not at all,” responded
Herb.
Cory turned the volume knob
and nothing happened. He cranked it all the way over and still the
expensive speaker system didn’t let out a peep.
“Huh---what the hell….?”
Then he grinned at his own
absentmindedness and said, “Oh that’s right, I unplugged the
extension cord for the forward electrical system. Jez, you’d think
would know this boat after being on it for two weeks.”
Cory switched cords, and when
he did a blast of electric guitar music rolled over the shallows and
up each end of the coastline. Of course the volume was turned down
after about five seconds.
“You know, back in The
Nam, there
were boat skippers who would have made you walk home along the banks
for doing something like that,” said Herb.
“Hey man, every day the
people in this region get a little bit more modern. More and more
radios and tape players are being purchased. More and more electric
power to keep them running. Probably nobody heard that but if they
did, they’ll figure that some kid tuned in to the wrong radio
station. Anyway, we’re not sitting ducks anymore so go ahead and
point the bow any direction that suits you.”
Herb rolled his eyes at that
and powered the boat away from land for half an hour. Then they
turned north and Herb throttled back to conserve fuel. The sea was
perfect and the ex-naval officer spent the next couple of hours
contemplating the history of the waters around him. Most Americans
would only think about Egypt, Greece and Rome when the subject of
ancient civilizations came up. (In most cases such content came in
the form of a rerun of Cleopatra
staring
Elizabeth Taylor and Richard Burton.)
To
the north on the coast of Yemen
there was
an ancient port city called Aden.
It was the
name sake of the gulf they were slowly heading towards. In the 6th
Century B.C. the ancient Awsan
received
trading vessels from The
Red Sea area
and even merchants from as far away as India. From that time until
the present, there was always the possibility of a pirate attack. But
the sea going brigands always distributed their ill gotten gain
amongst the local population of their home port, so the only way to
catch a pirate ship was by happening upon it out on the open ocean.
The majority of the ships
that sailed through the area were never challenged, and localThird
World naval
forces could not afford to escort every ship that sailed along their
coasts. So the various concerned parties in the gulf area became
receptive to various possible solutions to a problem that kept
getting bigger. So there they were, two mercenary boatmen pretending
to be fat cats. One hoping to bag some bad guys, and the other hoping
to sail without incident.
The two men spent most of the
day talking about the shortcomings of where they grew up. When they
got into the realm of adult experiences Corry managed to put his foot
in his mouth at least once per nautical mile. Herb didn’t much
care. You couldn’t grow up a Native American in Vegas unless you
had a thick skin.
“So you married a
Vietnamese huh. Man, sometimes I think you guys fought the last
traditional war in American history.”
“How so?” queried Herb.
“Well, drinking and whoring
are natural parts of military experience. Your war provided plenty of
both. But the poor kids in the military now-a-days got nothing to do
but play with their lap top computers. This Muslim world isn’t a
fit place for any western fighting man. Everything that comes natural
to a warrior is frowned upon in these parts and yet they chop
people’s heads off for stuff that wouldn’t get you six months in
jail back home. They’re all gunna end up with cell phones and air
conditioning but they will still be a pack of savages because they
would rather see their daughters dead than in bed with Jews or
Ethiopians.”
Herb couldn’t remember the
last time he felt so polarized by a new acquaintance, but he hated
prolonged silence even more so he decided to run the risk of starting
an argument out in the middle of nowhere.
“There were a number of
what you might call flesh
pots in the
country where I fought. But for the most part the young women had
fathers or brothers and you wanted to think twice before attempting
to trifle with any of them. To this day I’m not one-hundred percent
sure my ex-brother-in-law wasn’t a VC sympathizer, but I can tell
you that he owned an SKS
and my
uniform wouldn’t have cut shit with him if I had approached his
sister in the wrong manner.”
“Well sure---I’m just
saying that proper R&R
was
available back in that war. But in these parts you gotta be a John
Wayne type and live for shooting guns because there isn’t much else
to do where the women wear tents and the booze has to be shipped in
by the military itself.”
“Oh I’m sure there are
some entrepreneurs here and there who help our boys in uniform get
by,” responded Herb.
“But not nearly as well as
what they would have just about any other place on this planet;
that’s all I’m saying.”
“So says the man who has
two department store honey’s in his boat,” Herb muttered half to
himself.
“I would have cheerfully
accepted the company of real live female operatives provided that I
wouldn’t have to share my bonus money with them,” Cory half
joked. “You know, that’s another thing that’s going to cause
trouble in the future: women wanting to---“
Herb’s field glasses
suddenly came up to eye level and Cory quickly followed suit.
“Small boat heading towards
us,” stated Herb.
“Yea, coming straight out
of the west with the damn setting sun almost behind him. You gunna
tell me that doesn’t look suspicious as all hell?”
“Lock and load but for
God’s sake don’t ignore me,” was all Herb had to say while
checking the pistol he had been issued. “They could be coming out
to sell us bait or something.”
The boat turned out to be a
twenty-seven foot Sea
Hawk with
three men on board. They came in with broad smiles and waving hands
as the boat drew a huge playful circle in the water while staying
seventy-five yards out. Then the engine was powered down and the
circle got smaller.
Herb got on the bull horn and
put his best diplomatic foot forward.
“I sure hope one of you
guys speaks English!”
“But of course! You can’t
make any money on the coast if you don’t speak English!” shouted
one of the three.
“And what service are you
providing so far from land?!” Herb shouted back.
“One of the oldest of all
professions!” the Somali shouted with the first half of his
favorite joke.
Herb tensed and drew his
pistol from the small of his back.
“Surely such fine
upstanding gentlemen as yourselves could not be talking about
prostitution!”
“God forbid! Besides, I
don’t think you two could handle real live women, or you wouldn’t
be entertaining yourselves with store window dummies!” the man
called out as two Ak-47s
were
brought up.
Herb was amazed by the
physical sensations that nearly overpowered him at that point. He was
a combat veteran but that didn’t matter a damn bit as the speedboat
brought the gunmen ever closer. He was scared. Stomach turning
bladder screaming scared and the pistol he had almost distained to
carry was now shaking in his hand.
Suddenly one of the manikins
was blown in half by a horizontal flame that seemed to reach all the
way across the water to the smaller boat. The Sea Hawk had tightened
their circle to forty-five yards which constituted easy enough
shooting for an Ak,
but for a
mini gun it was execution style killing and nothing less.
The stream of 7.62 rounds
blew up the starboard side of the speed boat hull and then chewed up
everything astern like a fern subjected to a hail storm. Two of the
men were shoved out of the boat by an invisible sweeping hand that
turned the corpses inside out before they could slap the surface of
the water as two crimson objects that no longer looked like men.
Both Herb and Cory expected
to find the third man dead and sprawled out on the bottom of the
boat. With hundreds of bullet holes in the boat it was a logical
assumption. Herb brought the yacht in closer so that they could view
the contents of the craft that was rapidly taking water. Cory leaned
slightly over the edge of the forward deck and saw something that had
his eyes go wide.
The last remaining Somali was
indeed laid out on the bottom of the boat. His left leg was bleeding
but Cory didn’t really notice that. He was too busy staring at the
rocket propelled grenade that was pointed at him. In Cory’s mind he
was bringing his 9mm to bear on this horrifying threat, but it was
nothing more than a split second fantasy that the American would
carry with him into eternity.
The rocket launch was not
experienced, nor the explosion that ripped the deck out from under
Cory and ruined both his legs. But the total silence that followed
the blast, and the sight of Cory slipping into the water made up Herb
Greenwood’s total existence for the next few seconds; or maybe it
was minutes. It was a form of shock that he had never experienced in
Viet Nam, and when it wore off and he could hear again, he could only
think about finding Cory. Toward that end he tried to venture around
the port side of the cabin housing; mindful of the fact that there
was still an enemy off to the starboard side.
Sure enough, when he ventured
a tad too far forward, he discovered that Cory’s assailant was
armed with more than just a single shot RPG. A hail of bullets drove
Herb to the deck and forced him to crawl backwards to a move
defensible position. When that was accomplished he called out to the
remaining pirate.
“Do you speak English!”
“I’m the same man you
were talking to before you ambushed us!” the Somali shouted back in
anger.
“I think we ambushed each
other. Or were you planning on selling
us those
rifles you brought out?”
“You white men never
change. You only fight when you can employ a great superiority in
firepower!”
“And you showed up with an
RPG to take a couple of vacationers prisoner! I don’t think either
one of us is Mother
Teresa material!”
“I will not be taken
prisoner by any representative of the United States government!”
“Dying is NOT preferable to
my company, Mr. Long John Silver!” Herb responded while still
hoping to catch a glimpse of Cory.
“You boat is badly damaged.
Leave this area and I will not shoot at you!”
“Hell, all you did was give
the cabin a sun roof. Your boat on the other hand could be used to
grate cheese, and its going down fast!”
“I have a life preserver.
Whether or not I make use of it depends on you. I say again: I will
not be
taken prisoner!”
It occurred to Herb that he
could grant this idiot his wish and sail off, but he very much wanted
to retrieve Cory’s body; assuming that the other American was truly
dead. He also liked the idea of taking a prisoner, and to his way of
thinking, that’s what this whole operation was designed for in the
first place. Herb’s pistol hand wouldn’t stop shaking. He had
never gotten this close to an enemy that was determined to keep on
fighting and he felt certain that if he broke from cover and shot it
out with this last pirate, he would be the loser. Sadly, he concluded
that it was time to do something really stupid.
“I’ll make you a deal!”
he shouted from his hiding spot. “I’ll throw my gun overboard and
you can keep yours. Then you can come aboard my boat and I’ll take
you to shore after I’ve retrieved the body of my partner!”
There was a pause and then
the voice said, “Agreed, but I need to see the pistol fall into the
water!”
“May fortune favor the
foolish,” thought
Herb before he lobbed his pistol into the water some three feet off
the speed boat’s half submerged stern.
Herb slowly straightened his
legs and moved around the cabin with a tension he hadn’t felt in
years. He half expected to see a man standing in knee deep water
preparing to shoot him, but in fact his adversary was still on the
bottom of the boat, which meant that he was now chest deep in sea
water.
“I
thought I could stand up, but I am having difficulty with this leg,”
the young pirate was forced to admit.
Herb
to the yacht’s bow line and threw it down where it soaked in the
water that now filled the speed boat. Then he awkwardly lowered
himself into the crimson tainted water. When he offered his hand to
the Somali, the later raised a pistol higher and glared at the
American.
“I don’t trust you. I
have a pole for sculling. You may use it to pull me up onto the
yacht.”
Herb picked up the four foot
long pole and then tried to get the water filled boat hip to hip with
the yacht but the former was too heavily laden with water.
“You’re going to have to
move over the bow,” Herb reported unnecessarily.
The young man shook his head.
“I’ll just slip over the
side and you can pull me up.”
Herb then noted something
that was most disconcerting. One of the Somali corpses had suddenly
regained some of it’s animation, and it wasn’t because the man
had come back from the dead.
“We got company. You gotta
go from boat to boat. You slip into open water and they might take
you.”
The young man grimly observed
one of his dead comrades being devoured by a shark and said, “It is
a distraction. I will be safe for a few moments and that is all you
will need.”
Now it was Herb’s turn to
look skeptical.
“I’m not a weight lifter
in his prime, and we don’t know how many critters have come
calling. I’m going to take you piggy back.”
“What are you saying about
pigs?” the Muslim growled through his growing pain.
“It’s an American
expression. I’m going to have you climb onto my back.”
“I thought you just said
you are not good at lifting weights.”
“Legs are stronger than
arms. Now don’t argue with me anymore---we’re running out of
time,” Herb shot back.
The
ex-Navy man then positioned himself in front of the thin Muslim and
lowered his center of gravity until he was almost squatting.
“Come on, let’s get
moving before the bow rises up on us.”
“I still---do not—trust
you,” the pirate grunted out as he made a maximum effort to get his
good leg under him.
“Yea, well---you got the
pistol behind me. Don’t go asking for more insurance than that.”
The Muslim wrapped his left
arm around Herb’s neck so that he could continue to hold the 9mm in
a blood stained fist. Then the two of them slogged one impossible
step at a time to the precarious point were the two boats were
jointed together. Herb had semi-secured the yacht’s bow line so
that if the speed boat turned into a submarine, the line would come
undone and not tilt the larger boat.
Climbing Mt.
Everest would
have been more of a challenge, but for a few moments, Herb was
convinced that he’d be left with a wrecked lumbar and a double
hernia while struggling to board a deck that was only twenty-eight
inches higher than that of the speed boat before it dipped below the
ocean’s surface. At some point in that joint struggle the young
pirate stopped pointing his pistol at Herb’s head and the American
stopped expecting to be shot execution style. The two of them lay
side by side while struggling to get their wind back, then Herb
finally thought to evaluate the young man’s leg which was oozing
watered down crimson.
“I gotta----get a
combination tourniquet---- and splint---- on that.”
Like a drunk Herb lurched
onto unsteady feet and went to rummage through the boat’s advanced
first aid kit. It was a huge bag containing many battle dressings, a
splint kit and most importantly, compact morphine syringes that would
get the Muslim high for the first time in his life.
Then Herb peered around the
immediate vicinity of the boat until he spotted Cory’s body
floating face down. Starting up the engine Herb managed to get close
enough to the corpse to hook it with a gaffing pole. Herb wouldn’t
have bet more than pocket change that he could get the corpse on
board, but he had to try. So after gathering his second
wind he
gripped the pole tightly and placed one foot on gunwale for a bit of
extra leverage. He strained with protesting muscles but only for a
moment.
The hook slipped off and the
body rolled sharply over as additional blood mixed with the frothy
water. Then an ugly head became visible for just an instant before
fading away again. Herb was startled by the sight of the shark, but
he didn’t realize that he was in the process of losing a contest
until the body promptly disappeared under the red slick that merged
with the shadow of the boat.
“One more memory,”
Herb thought grimly before fetching a water jug and placing it beside
the wary African.
“Hang tough Young Fella,
help is about forty-five minutes away.”
“My name is Labaan,” the
Somali informed him.
“I’m Herb Greenwood.”
After a pause the American
asked, “Got a last name Labaan?”
“Not one I wish to share
with an enemy,” was the curt reply.
“Right,” Herb half
muttered while starting the engine up.
The yacht headed back toward
the African coast as the last rays of the sun enabled Herb to
re-examine his pistol packing patient. Herb wanted to place the
Somali in one of the two bunk beds but Labaan wouldn’t hear of it.
So the pirate sat on the stern deck with his back braced against a
combination seat and storage compartment. Thus, he could not help but
stare at the hated mini gun that had wounded him and killed his
comrades.
“You meddle in matters that
are none of your concern and then you have to fight with weapons that
give your opponents no chance at all,” the Muslim declared with a
sneer.
“That gun was the private
property of the man you killed. We just teamed up together yesterday
but I’m inclined to think he was a bit odd,” said the American.
“No more so than any other
meddling trigger jolly American thrill seeker,” the black man
responded.
“The
expression is trigger
happy my
young friend; and we’re not meddling, we are reacting to unlawful
behavior.”
“These are not
international waters. Any ship that sails on Somali waterways should
pay a duty to the Somali people.”
“Sounds fair to me,”
responded Herb with a shrug, “but ninety percent of all vessels
operating on this side of the continent are giving this area a wide
berth, so if you people want to float a toll booth on a cooperative
shipping lane, you’re going to have to stop kidnapping people and
holding them for ransom.”
“Piracy is not the cause,
it is the
effect of
what has done so much damage in this region,” hypothesized the
young black. “The coastal fishing industry cannot survive
intrusions from foreign trawlers. Also, more and more toxic waste
materials are being dumped in our seas.”
“Yea, I know a little bit
about that sort of thing. It’s the same story in many parts of
Southeast Asia. But you should take a lesson from the environmental
organizations that specialize in meddling
as you would put it. They form blockades and cause freighter captains
to grow gray hair by playing chicken
with them,
but they do
not wave
guns around and take hostages.”
“We are just getting
started,” the young man clucked. “Someday our people will have
the recourses to venture two-hundred miles from the coast. You will
see.”
“You know something, if all
you Somali are such big mouths when you get a snoot full of
something, then I’m actually glad that sedatives are against your
religion.”
Labaan snorted at that and
asked, “Do you think our doctors allow the patients to suffer? Do
you think we actually live in the 7th
Century just because the last of the prophets came to us at that
time?”
“Well excuse the hell out
of me,” Herb responded. “Now with your permission I’ll take you
to Aluula.
It’s not
the closest piece of land, but I’m guessing they have some kind of
clinic or something.”
The African shook his head in
the gathering darkness.
“Do not confuse us with the
unfortunate people who live along the Ethiopian frontier. The sea has
brought us prosperity for centuries. It is not our concern that you
judge us by how many Disneyland parks we have.”
“Must be the morphine
talking,” thought
Herb.
After that both men kept
quiet until a few electric lights served to guide the yacht to the
correct point on the darkened coast. Herb was just grateful that the
weather wasn’t being a problem. Hopefully he would be able to get
in and out of port before sunrise.
When the American announced
that they were approaching their destination the younger man became
more talkative.
“It is good that we draw
near. The painkiller is beginning to wear off.”
“Good, it will add to the
drama,” joked Herb.
The African looked thoughtful
for a moment and then asked, “Why have you not used your radio?
Have you no comrades who need to know what has happened to you?”
“Yup. But if I had called
them earlier, they would have instructed me to take you to a place
that you wouldn’t like. Of course they won’t be pleased with how
things turned out, but I’ll tell them how this mighty Nubian
war god
leaped onto my boat with an Uzi
in each
huge hand and ordered me to patch up his wound. Hell I’m not Rambo
and they better be reasonable enough to accept that.”
“I would not carry an Uzi.
That is a Jewish gun.”
“Ok, I tell them they were
Ingram Mack
10s.”
Labaan grimaced as a wave of
pain washed over his leg.
“You Americans are crazy.
You have no idea what is important in life.”
“Yet people from all over
the world want to come and live with us,” Herb pointed out. “Maybe
someday we’ll even get a wave of Somali immigrants.”
“Ha! More likely
Ethiopians. It would be wonderful if you took them all. We fishermen
will always do well so long as we can keep greedy foreigners from
ruining our waters.”
“As long as you got
generals up against commies I don’t believe you’ll ever have
political stability. I hate to tell you this Labaan, but the
international community doesn’t give a damn about African
fishermen. All they care about is who is riding a limo to the palace
every morning. Somebody with bullet proof windshields if he’s
smart.”
The younger man’s thoughts
once again returned to the mini gun.
“I want you to throw that
filthy weapon overboard.”
“Ok, but there’s plenty
more where that one came from.”
“I don’t care. The sight
of it offends me. Besides, if the wrong people should see it, you
might not get out of the harbor alive.”
“So you know some pirates
in Aluula.”
“I know people who read
about the American C.I.A.
and do not
like what they read.”
“So they might murder me
before going out to feed their wives and children. You see that’s
one thing that’s a bit different about my country. In the United
States men own guns to go deer hunting or target shooting. When
someone protests something with flying lead, we call that person a
criminal.”
“Does that mean you want
to preserve
that gun at the cost of your life?” asked the Somali.
With a long suffering look
the American unclamped the weapon from its special mount and heaved
it over the side.
“If you ever do come to the
United States maybe you can get a job working for the A.T.F.
Herb
muttered while returning to the helm.
The Somali had no idea what
that meant but he was fairly certain it was another lame American
joke. By the time they reached the side of a well maintained pier,
Labaan was in no shape to laugh at anything. The morphine had worn
off and he wasn’t about to ask for more while his countrymen were
staring at the boat and the white man who had brought him back from
the sea. An ambulance was called and the Harbor
Master was
gotten out of bed.
Herb gave some real serious
thought to jumping back on the yacht and high tailing it out of the
dark silent harbor before anyone in a uniform could show up.
Technically he wasn’t guilty of any crime, but politics alone can
kill a man if he sets off a hair trigger temper or two. So Herb stood
on the dock some ten feet from his boat and waited for some official
looking guy to show up. Maybe even the mayor wearing a sash and a
goofy hat or something. What he got was an old man in a night shirt.
Well, actually it was a long shirt called a Khameez.
Despite the
gravity of the situation Herb found himself wondering where the man
kept his wallet.
Not surprisingly, the harbor
master didn’t know a word of English and a boy of perhaps twelve
had to interpret. The youngster couldn’t have been happier since it
made him feel very important. His name was Fowsi,
and he had
the honor of speaking on behalf of Cabaas
Samatar Esquire. (Actually
Herb got this long formal title thrown at him but he caught the
Cabaas Samatar part.)
“The Harbor Master asks if
you are responsible for the injured man’s wounds,” put forth the
boy.
“Yes. He is guilty of
attempted piracy, and he was shot while combating myself and a
companion who is dead.”
“Where is the pirate boat?”
the harbor master then asked.
“It has been sunk, and the
bodies were taken by sharks.”
“With what weapon did you
sink the pirate boat?” was the next inquiry.
“A very special machine gun
that was lost in the battle.”
Soon after the boy said, “It
is not my place to deal with such serious matters. The chief
constable is being alerted and will arrive shortly. In the meantime
you may wait in my office. Please follow me.”
“Wait. I need to go aboard
my yacht and send a radio message so that my people will know where I
am.”
“I will not permit this,
but it is possible that the chief constable will. Please understand
that I have no training in these matters and I must therefore err on
the side of caution.”
Herb looked around. Five men
stood at the entrance to the pier. A sixth stood beside the harbor
master with the boy on his other side. Son and grandson? Quite
possibly. He wasn’t getting any negative vibes
from these
people but that could change very quickly. He had heard many a
frightening story about foreigners who ended up dead. Most of it was
probably bullshit, but then most foreigners didn’t go around
shooting the native population with a mini gun.
Herb let out a long regret
filled sigh and made his decision.
“I am sorry, but if you
will not allow me to use my radio within the confines of your harbor,
then I am forced to head back out onto open water.”
“You are saying then that
our laws mean nothing to you,” responded the harbor master.
“I will face your due
process of law at the proper time,” Herb promised. “But I must
contact my people before I place myself in anyone’s power.”
The grown man standing next
to Samatar was a strong looking fellow and without orders he made a
move towards the American.
In a flash a 9mm pistol was
in Herb’s fist. The Somali froze in his tracks and Herb was mighty
grateful for that. Then while the other Somali rushed up the pier to
add their numbers to the Samatar family, Herb used his experience as
a swift boat pilot to get his yacht backed away from the pier in
double quick time. That was one skill that every riverine pilot
excelled at out of absolute necessity. Herb was toying with the idea
of returning to the pier in the morning when suddenly familiar
flashes of light appeared from the shore and medium velocity bullets
whined by him.
“I knew some of those
guys would have guns on their boats,”
thought Herb as he hit the deck and allowed the yacht to race out to
sea with no one at the wheel.
When there was a thousand
yards of water between him and the shore he chanced getting up from
his prone position and making for the short wave Kenwood that had
been largely ignored up until now.
Keying the mike he said,
“North Star this is Gatling Gun. North Star this is Gatling Gun. Do
you copy?”
There was a pause that
suggested that the chief of operations wasn’t expecting any of his
boats to be calling in after dark.
“Gatling Gun this is
North Star. What is your situation?”
“North Star we have made
contact with pirates. My gunner is dead and I am running west of
Aluula.”
Another pause.
“Hug the coast. We will
get to you before you reach Abo.”
“Acknowledged,” Herb
replied with a hollow feeling.
Cory had told him that Abo
was supposed to be a tiny bad weather sanctuary for small boats. But
only if you belonged to the right tribal clan. It was also supposed
to be inhabited by pirate informers. There was one friendly satrap
located
west of Abo, but Herb didn’t know where and he didn’t know if it
was the same set up as what he and Cory shared briefly or perhaps a
bit more elaborate. It probably wouldn’t accommodate two boats but
there was just no way of knowing.
Herb didn’t care much for
the idea of trying to get there, but he was even less enthusiastic
about heading back the way that he came. He was cruising in the dark,
knowing that the dawn would bring hostile attention on him. Somebody
would have to find him in the next few hours or he would become the
subject of a race between Somali law enforcement and the vigilantes.
Herb thought a little more
about what Labaan had said. Would the pirate activity become wide
spread someday? Would ships sailing hundreds of miles away come under
attack? It seemed highly unlikely. These guys were just freaking out
fishermen under the canopy of a weak government. What made Labaan so
sure the piracy problem would escalate? Herb would have to wait for
the 1990s to get his answer. At the present time, few Americans knew
anything about Somalia, and even fewer were aware of the fishing
issues in that part of the world.
It would have been a
beautiful sunrise on the ocean if not for the fact that the yacht was
running low on fuel and Herb didn’t trust the disembodied voice
that had promised help several hours ago. Only the calm water offered
any comfort, and Herb briefly mused that river piloting tended to
spoil a boatman. Out on the ocean you had to be able to navigate a
rough sea now and then or there wasn’t much point in having a boat
at all. But then it really wasn’t necessary to be all that grateful
to old Neptune.
He wasn’t in the north Atlantic; he was just someplace where
boaters shoot at other boaters.
He snacked on cookies and
coke for the better part of an hour. Then he got a bit of a surprise
when something left the coastal bluffs a couple of miles up ahead and
proceeded towards him at an altitude of maybe fifty feet. Soon enough
it was recognized as a war era Huey.
Of course
that didn’t necessarily mean that it would be friendly. Every
government in the region had a fleet of choppers in their military.
But seconds later a familiar voice called out from the Kenwood and it
lifted a great weight from Herb’s shoulders.
“Gatling Gun this is
North Star. Proceed immediately to the beach. Do you copy?”
“Acknowledged,” said a
very relieved Herb Greenwood.
But as the yacht approached
the shore Herb became a bit confused. He half expected to find
another satrap,
or at least
a patch of beach that was receptive to a yacht’s keel. But all he
saw was rocks that served no purpose but to render the area useless
to man and domesticated beast. That did provide a measure of privacy
which would be in short supply when the search boats finally arrived.
“Gatling Gun to North
Star---just so you know this landing could earn me a punched in
hull.”
“Understood Gatling Gun.
Proceed and disembark.”
Herb took to the rocks as
gently as he could, but the scraping sounds underneath him were far
worse than fingernails on a chalk board. That didn’t keep him from
monitoring the movements of his airborne confederates however. He
noted with great interest that almost immediately after disappearing
behind the edge of a bluff, the chopper’s engine slowed down
considerably. It was most definitely making a landing just beyond a
cliff. Herb stared ahead at what would be a thirty foot climb while
killing the engine. No ropes would be needed but he was glad he
wasn’t going to have to ascend the rocks at high noon.
He was just about to begin
his climb when a young man of perhaps twenty scurried down the rock
face with what turned out to be a satchel charge.
“Is the stiff onboard?”
asked the young man.
“You mean Cory? The sharks
got him. I would have explained that but I was instructed to keep my
transmissions as short as possible.”
“Well,
I guess that simplifies things,” the younger man muttered half to
himself.
As Herb watched from the
shore, the other man climbed aboard the yacht and quickly had the
engine running in full reverse. The keel screeched in protest but
that meant nothing to the man at the helm. When the boat was finally
free of the rocks, the boat’s lone occupant got out a strange
device that was shaped like a World War I army helmet.
Built into the brim section
on four sides were some curious little devices that were detonated
with a hammer that the young man had with him. Each contained a .22
blank cartridge that instantly drove a sheet metal screw down into
the deck. With four prompt BANGS
the helmet
shaped device was secured to the boat’s deck. Then the man leaped
off the bow and got out of the water before any aquatic predictors
could take an interest in.
“Alright, let’s get
climbing,” he said with a clap of the hands before passed Herb and
starting up a fairly precarious rocky slope.
By the time Herb had made it
to the top, the younger man had gotten the radio detonating device
from the chopper pilot and had armed it. Then with the push of just
one more button the man created a disturbance that caused Herb to
turn his head in alarm. He watched bits of deck material sail up into
the air and rain back down on a boat that was now taking water. The
gaping maw would allow the sea to flood in until the cabin and hold
were completely awash. Herb guessed the boat would go under in about
twenty minutes; maybe less.
“That’s kind of wasteful
don’t you think?” queried Herb.
“I don’t get paid to
think,” the young man replied while leading the way to the chopper.
“I’ll bet that’s the
dying truth,”
Herb thought.
In the back of the Huey
sat the man
who had communicated with him moments ago. The man stared at him like
a teacher catching a student putting gum on the underside of his
desk. He was wearing a helmet with a com-link built in. He offered
another such helmet to Herb while the younger operative helped
himself to the co-pilot’s seat.
As soon as his head set was
in place the chopper rose above the parched bluff top and headed out
to circle the yacht as it settled lower and lower in the water.
“I’m Henderson. Now
exactly how did the shoot out go down?”
“We were approached by a
speed boat carrying three guys. As soon as Cory spotted their AKs he
opened with that mini gun of his. He got two but the third had an RPG
that took out our forward deck and Cory with it. It was a miracle
that I didn’t catch any shrapnel but I suppose Cory’s body
shielded me for the most part.”
“Where is the mini-gun?”
“Well, that third pirate
sort of got the drop on me for a while. He threw the gun overboard in
a fit of anger,” fibbed
Herb.
“But eventually you were
able to turn the tables on him right?”
“That’s right. He was
hurt in the leg and after losing a few pints of blood he became
manageable”
“So he zoned out and you terminated him?”
“So he zoned out and you terminated him?”
“No. I took him to
Aluula.”
Herb braced himself for a
tirade, and it came to him with such volume that he didn’t need the
com-link to hear over the roar of the helicopter engine.
“God dammit Greenwood,
you broke our most important rule! You capture or you kill, but you
do NOT hand any prisoners over to any locals!”
Herb took one last look down
at the sinking yacht before the Huey completed its reconnaissance
circle and started a run to a private air strip. Then he fixed
Henderson with a look that belonged to a free man.
“I wasn’t going to
admit this, but the truth is I made a deal with that last surviving
pirate. I would take him to land and set him free if he would
temporarily surrender to me. If I hadn’t made that deal, I might
have been killed in a gunfight and I didn’t see any reason why I
should allow that to happen.”
“And what about your
dead partner? Didn’t you figure that you owned him some payback?”
“We killed two of them
and sent their boat to the bottom. That was about as good as it was
going to get that day,” was
Herb’s response.
“Well, you’re all done
here and you’ll get debriefed by a C.I.A. man when you get back to
The States. Something tells me you won’t be able to use him for a
future reference. I’m sorry you almost got killed Greenwood, but
dropping that Skinny off at Aluula was a big mistake, and I’m sure
you’ll get called on it.”
Herb certainly didn’t give
shit about that. He had never gotten so fed up with something so
quickly in his life. Even Viet Nam came in a poor second to the
foolishness he had been subjected to in less than forty-eight hours.
He was most definitely ready to give up pirate hunting and return to
Nevada.
Herb returned to work a day
late but that didn’t upset anyone terribly and the money that he
brought back with him looked real pretty in the form of a car that
wasn’t new but it was better than what he had before. He returned
to his favorite watering hole after work each evening but he had
settled into the practice of having three drinks only and then
walking out. It was his idea of a structured life in a city where
getting drunk was big business. There was something about the number
three that appealed to him, and sometimes he would regale himself
with a low volume ditty while exiting the drinking emporium.
“And its one—two—three
drinks yer
out of the ohhhld barrr game,” which of course was a take off on
Take Me Out
To The Ball Game.
In the months that followed
Herb’s performance as a teacher lapsed into something that was less
than sterling. But it didn’t warrant dismissal, just a bit of
gossiping from the few people who were associated with his academic
activities. He was grading some papers at home when his estranged
wife surprised him with an unexpected visit.
“Good afternoon sir, can I
interest you in our latest line of Avon
products?”
joked the Asian.
“Which is sold by women who
don’t need that stuff,” put in Herb while holding the door open
for his visitor.
“If you’re talking about
me, then your memory must be going. I never left the house before
putting on my war paint.”
“Yea, marked His
and Hers,”
the Native
American joked back.
“Glad to see you’re in
good spirits, Herb.”
“The spirits
will be in
me after
I’m done grading these papers. Tried grading papers a few times
with a snoot full and the results were soon brought to the attention
of Principal Andrews.”
“Why do you call him that
anyway? You and two other part time adult education people share a
meeting hall that hasn’t been busy since they did away with the
ping pong championships. Greg Andrews is just a tribal council member
who is in charge of the building because he changed the locks on the
doors and keeps the keys.”
“He’s a very well read
man who is ready to jump in and substitute when needed,” put in
Herb. “The principal thing started out as a joke but in truth I
think he kind of likes it.”
“Yea, I get that impression
as well. Ok, fine, I understand that he sticks his nose in your
business because he’s bored and sometimes that works out good for
you because he’s willing to cover your ass.”
“I do not deny that I’m
too informal to work in a real
school
where they have what is called standards,”
said Herb.
“You would be if you gave
up drinking and bothered to lift a foot to step up higher on the
professional ladder. But we’ve been over this before and I didn’t
come here to go over it again.”
“But you just did,” Herb
muttered.
“With apologies,” put in
the Asian with hands held out in surrender.
“So why are
you here?
It couldn’t have anything to do with the money I earned off the
Somalia coast. That was chump change compared to what you’re making
now.”
“Oh no. Like I said before,
whatever you can earn is yours. I’m doing fine at the casino.”
Herb was tempted to say how
unnecessary that last statement was but he decided it was time to
find out what the woman wanted.
“So---what can I do you
for?”
“Well, the fact is we’ve
been invited to a party. You and I.”
Herb perked up a bit with
that piece of news. Parties meant drinks and usually when he had a
glass in his hand the semi-ex-wife would be occupied elsewhere
instead of sharing in the fun.
“Great. So what’s the
occasion?”
“This is so very cool Herb.
Those boat people you saved have all established themselves here in
The States.
I guess
they’re all doing really fine. So now after all this time they want
to honor you with a party on a cruise ship. Isn’t that neat?”
The ex-naval officer’s
expression turned inward and for a moment he was far a way and in a
different time. Nhu recognized the look instantly and sensed that
this wasn’t going to be an easy sell.
“You know Herb, I’ve been
thinking for a long time now that it would be good if the two of us
tried to spend some real quality time together. I freely admit that
my job has stood in the way of that sort of thing far more than any
bad habits that have come your way since becoming a civilian. So I
think now is the perfect time for me to go tell my boss that I want
some time off and I won’t take no for an answer.”
Herb let out a long and
awkward sigh before asking, “Why can’t we have this party here in
Vegas? It would make all the sense in the world.”
The woman shrugged slightly.
“Maybe they’re thinking
we’d enjoy getting away from this place for a while. After all, its
a vacation place for most people, but its a home and work place for
us. Besides, a cruise ship thing is kind of, what you call ritzy.
I’m sure
they want to thank you in some sort of big way.”
“Yea and I know a few
things about Asians,” muttered Herb to the nearest wall.
“What’s that supposed to
mean?” Nhu inquired with suspicion.
“Maybe they just want to
show off how well they’re doing these days.”
“Compared to you for
example?” the woman shot back instantly. “I swear I don’t know
what eats at you the most: war memories or the fact that success
hasn’t been handed to you on a silver platter.”
“Says the woman who gets
paid to play card games,” grumbled the part time math teacher.
The woman’s expression
turned to stone and she rose from her chair intending to return to a
world that was easier to work with.
“A man died on me while I
was working that temp job,” Herb said to her back.
The woman slowly turned
around, somewhat pleased to finally find out what the job had been
about.
“Somali fishermen are up in
arms over trespasses taking place in their waters. They’re getting
crazy about the whole thing and some of them have turned pirate. I
joined an outfit that is supposed to discourage that sort of thing
but they’re going about it all wrong. I got paired up with a guy
who had a yen for adventure and he got blown to hell. I had a gut
feeling about the guy but I played along because the odds were
supposed to be ten to one that we wouldn’t see any trouble before
going home.”
“Did he have a wife?”
asked Nhu.
Herb smiled briefly and said,
“No, I got the impression that he wasn’t the relationship type.”
The woman let out a sigh.
“You should have said
something.”
“Truth is I was ushered
into this man’s office in Washington D.C. and told what would
happen to me if I did
share my
experiences with you.”
“You don’t suppose
they’ll contact you again do you?” the woman asked with a look of
foreboding.
“Not likely. I didn’t
perform within acceptable parameters…..Just like before.”
“Which brings us back to
all those grateful people who would like to see you again,” Nhu put
in quickly. “Fair warning Herb, I won’t turn them down on your
behalf. If the answer is no, then you’ll have to deliver the
message yourself.”
“You think I can’t?” he
shot back.
The woman then took a slip of
paper out of her handbag and fairly slammed it on Herb’s improvised
desk. Then she marched out of the efficiency apartment that had been
their first home in America. Herb stared at the phone number off and
on for several hours before finally dialing it. Then he wimped out
and said he simply couldn’t get away from work to go on a sailing
trip for at least a couple of years. That pacified all concerned
parties for a year; and then, something interesting happened.
Herb lost his job, but then
so did everyone else in the make shift educational facility. The
Federal Government decided it just wasn’t proper having Paiute
waiters and hotel maids getting a second class education when
superior learning centers were so close at hand. So everyone was
given a grant to attend The University of Southern Nevada. Of course
Herb was made the same offer, which could in time get him better
teaching credentials. But instead he got a job driving cab, which he
liked because very often his fares would leave their bottles in the
back of his cab.
One time he actually went out
with a snoot full and discovered to his delight that if his clients
were drunk, they wouldn’t notice that the driver was drunk. But he
was sensible enough not to push his luck in that area. He didn’t
want to end up vacuuming carpets at 3:00 a.m. so he disciplined
himself to maintain a proper detoxification period before going to
work. This routine he was able to maintain for number of years, and
all that while he waited for Nhu to come and ask for a divorce, but
that never happened.
Then one evening he was
working the airport and picked up a fare that stared holes through
him as soon as he got out of the car to load up the trunk.
“Excuse me, were you ever
in the United States Navy?” the customer inquired.
Herb sized the man up under a
powerful airport security light. He was perhaps sixty years old.
Thin, well dressed except for the white socks; and strangely
familiar. The most telling thing about the man was that he was Asian.
“Yes. I was in charge of a
river patrol boat in the delta region of South Vietnam during the
war.”
“So you were never on the
Gulf of Thailand?” the Asian probed further.
Herb froze in his tracks.
Then he struggled to picture the faces of the men who had seen on the
boat. It was hard now, in part because he had tried so hard to forget
what they looked like.
“Yes I was, for a very
short while. Why do you ask?”
“You look very much like a
man who came to my rescue during the last days of the war. I was on a
boat that was attempting to make its way to Thailand. The communists
open fired on us from the shore. An American patrol boat made a long
cloud of smoke and then picked us up. Three men, five women and---“
“Six children,” Herb
finished.
“It is
you,” the
man said with a look of wonder. “I came here to find you. How
amazing that we should meet like this. My name is Bao Phan. I am the
brother in law of the man you spoke to on the phone.”
Herb had to do some fast
thinking. What were the exact details of that lie? How very true that
an honest man does not require a good memory.
“Yes---uh---I was teaching
math at that time. Then I got laid off and so now I’m driving a cab
obviously.”
“Is this a---oh, what do
you call it when your luck turns bad?” asked the Vietnamese.
“You mean a misfortune
or perhaps
a setback?
Meaning
khong may.”
“You speak Vietnamese!”
the Asian responded with a wide grin of approval.
“Not as well as you speak
English,” Herb responded in the Asian tongue.
“So our hero is a man who
straddles two cultures. In truth you might have spoken my language on
that fateful day when you saved our lives. I was so terrified, I
didn’t really understand anything that was going on around me.”
“Seems to me I did give one
or two orders in Vietnamese. But I did all my cursing in English.”
“Yes, one of your valiant
sailors lost his life for us. I would very much like to drink a toast
to his memory. May I have the honor of buying you a drink when you
get off work?”
Herb struggled with an
impulse to decline and finally said, “On one condition: We speak
only of my crew and your people. I don’t want to hear any more talk
about how heroic I was.”
“Modesty befitting a
hero,” thought
the small man, who then nodded with a slight bow.
“In that case Mr. Phan, I
think I just got off work.”
“Please call me Bao,”
begged the Asian, who placed his own luggage in the car trunk before
Herb could get to it.
“Alright, but only if you
call me Herb.”
Ten minutes later they were
at a table in Herb’s favorite watering hole. He wasn’t entirely
comfortable with his drinking companion, but he was bound and
determined not to drink more than the man who had come to find him.
Needless to say most of the conversation centered around the
deceased; especially George Williams. Time and time again Herb found
himself on the brink of despair. But each time he threatened to fall,
the now inebriated Asian would crack a stupid joke and slap Herb good
naturedly on the back. This only made sense to Herb because as it
turned out, Bao Phan had been a combat veteran, in the field for
nearly ten years.
As it turned out, it was not
the shelling that had terrified him, but rather, the prospect of
ending up in the water. Poor Bao suffered from acute aqua
phobia, and
the only reason he didn’t try to walk to Thailand was because his
wife was with him, and she had a bad hip.
“I’m forgetting
something,” the Asian said with a pronunciation problem that was
getting worse. “My sister mentioned it just before leaving me at
the St. Paul airport….”
Suddenly the Asian snapped
his fingers and said, “I remember. Her daughter wants to be a
professional singer. He could not get a job singing here, but she was
told that she could sing on a cruise ship if she came with enough
relatives.”
“Ah ha! There is the real
reason you
guys want to throw me a party,” Herb said jokingly. “You want to
launch the career of a relative. Well at least that makes sense to
me.”
“No no! We really want to
honor you!” Bao said while giving Herb his one-hundredth hug.
“Well, I’m honored enough
getting drunk with a man of your combat experience,” responded
Herb. “I got shot at five times before we met, and only one time
was I incapable of powering up and running away from those nasty
little bullets. But you
must have
collected one hell of a lot of gray hairs in ten years. Man, I think
your family wants to honor the wrong guy here. In fact I’m down
right embarrassed by the whole thing I swear to God.”
Bao shrugged good naturedly.
“There was one time: There
was a comrade on my right, and a comrade on my left. Both men were
hit and killed by machine gun fire, but I was not touched. I swear to
you---true story.”
Then the waitress delivered
the bill and Bao snatched it up with the speed of a striking cobra.
“Well now---I can see how
you stayed alive all those years my good sir. You have the reflexes
of Wild Bill Hickok!”
“Was he in the 73rd
Regiment?” Bao asked with a straight face.
“No, that came after him,”
responded Herb, who was getting too tired to think of a more witty
response.
“Well, I just know that
David Williams offered to pay for the entire outing when he found out
what we want to do. He said he would really like to see you after all
this time.”
Herb shoved his last drink
away and stared at the Asian with eyes that were suddenly more
intelligent.
“He wants to see me?”
“Yes---very much.”
“You’re saying that he’s
forgiven me?”
Bao had a little trouble with
that. Maybe because of the rice wine, maybe because he had not been
present at Herb Greenwood’s court-martial.
“You think he was angry
because you were in command that day?”
Herb allowed his thoughts to
slip back to those painful days when the Navy Brass
weighed his
conduct with an objectivity that was only possible after the fact.
“He never looked at me
once. I kept trying to catch a glance from him but he never looked my
way once. Not in three days.”
Suddenly Bao was also a bit
more sober.
“I did not
realize---but---if there was any anger back then, it is gone now. I
swear, he wishes to speak to you.”
Herb’s eyes moistened
slightly and he placed his hand upon his new friend’s shoulder.
“And I want to speak to
him. Anytime---anywhere.”
The cruise ship Fantasy
set no
records for size. She was eight-hundred and fifty-five feet long and
measured one-hundred and three feet abeam. She had crew of
nine-hundred but most of those folks were dedicated to the comforts
of the passengers. Her home port was Charleston
South Carolina and
her ports of call would be Grand
Turk, Half Moon Cay and
Nassau.
Herb didn’t much give a rip
about any of that. He was on the ship to meet a man, and nothing else
mattered to him. Nhu was a bit more festive, and under different
circumstances Herb would have appreciated the fact that she lost
twelve pounds and got her hair styled for this occasion. They were
given separate cabins because the sponsors of the cruise had been
informed that the couple was separated, but Nhu was constantly
hanging on Herb’s arm and the later worked extremely hard not to
say the wrong thing to his only close companion on board.
“What do you think we
should do, sit in the back?” Herb asked Nhu when it was finally
time to enter the main entertainment room.
“Actually Dear, I think
we’re supposed to be up front. But since you are as unassuming as
you are heroic, I suppose we could sit halfway up. That way your neck
muscles will get a good workout looking for Williams.”
“That’s not funny. This
is no time to be funny,” Herb responded as if the two of them were
secret agents.
Nhu chose a table for them
and unwrapped a salad fork before placing it next to a crystal water
goblet.
“Your right. I should stop
playing with you and inform you that this is going to be the best
evening you’re had in over sixteen years.”
“How can you know that?”
Herb asked with a ultra serious look. What are you hiding from me?”
“Nothing that can’t wait
thirty seconds Sweetie Pie,” cooed the woman before tapping her
glass with the fork.
Then it happened. An elderly
black man walked into the huge room and fixed a solemn gaze upon Herb
while making his way between empty tables on his way toward theirs.
In slow motion Herb rose from his chair, now totally oblivious to his
better half. Nhu for her part felt electrified by what was happening.
Herb never would have believed it, but the truth was that the
Vietnamese woman was waiting for a kind of redemption, just as Herb
had always hoped for.
David Williams knew exactly
what to do. He too had been waiting for this moment a very long time.
So at precisely the right moment he extended his hand to Herb, and
fixed him with a look of infinite wisdom. Herb took the hand as if in
a dream and then waited on what would come next.
“You’re looking good
Herb. You don’t mind if I call you that do you?”
“No sir,” Herb answered
quickly.
“How does that old joke
go?” the elderly man asked rhetorically. “Don’t call me sir,
I used to
work for a living?”
Herb’s grin was silly but
genuine.
“Mr. Williams, I am very
grateful that you are willing to meet with me like this.”
“Well you should be Herb. I
hate getting dressed up, almost as much as I hate being fussed over.
But I had a great lunch, and expect an even better supper.”
Herb’s mind was blank for a
second but then he remembered to offer the man a seat.
“So how did you meet this
fine wife of yours, Herb?”
“Well---I was studying
Vietnamese in what you might call a suburb of Saigon and my regular
teacher took sick. Nhu subbed for him and uh, well, I just made up my
mind that I wanted her to continue teaching me.”
“Because she was a great
teacher or a great looker?”
the old
man asked with an impish smile.
“I think her appearance
speaks for itself, sir, but I’m sure you’ve also noticed that Nhu
speaks English without an accent, and
I have yet
to find a slang term that she is unfamiliar with.”
“A woman’s beauty should
never have to speak for itself, Herb. That’s your job. It is also
your job to love her. If you do that properly, everything else will
fall into place.”
Herb stared at the table
cloth, not sure how to respond to that.
“I was told you lost your
wife two years ago, David. May I expend my belated sympathies,”
said Nhu.
Williams nodded slightly and
then placed his gaze back on Herb.
“That damn court-martial
was a fine example of how life isn’t always fair. I’m sorry I
didn’t approach you sooner on that matter.”
Herb looked into the other
man’s eyes and found something he thought he could hold on to.
“Without discipline, no
military organization can function. Men are ordered into harm’s way
by the thousands in times of war and any man who rejects his duty to
obey is forsaking the oath that he takes when he signs up.”
“I recall that you pled
guilty to the charges brought against you and offered a very brief
defense. Did you notice however that you received no prison time for
what you did? That of course is because every man at that trial
understood that you acted honorably, and they weren’t going to put
you behind bars for that.”
“My first responsibility
was to the mission and the men on my boat. I know it was a hard
choice to make, but as an officer in the United States Navy I should
have been up to that task. In that regard I failed, and that is why
your son died.”
There---it was out, and now
Herb would defy anyone to give him an argument. David Williams was up
to that. He was the one man uniquely qualified to do so.
“I didn’t look at you
once during the trial. The fact is I didn’t want you to be punished
for what you did, I just couldn’t look at you because you
represented a truth that I wasn’t yet ready to embrace. Military
people understand that freedom isn’t free, but from a parent’s
view, it’s got to be someone else’s
child who
pays the price.”
“I understand that sir,”
Herb responded as if speaking to an admiral.
“Do you? Then hear this
Mister. I got past the grief, to the point where there was nothing
left but pride. My real sin is that I didn’t meet with you much
sooner than this. For that I do apologize. But you,
are still
very much in the dark about this whole thing. You say you deserved to
lose your career in the Navy. Alright, let us all acknowledge here
and now that justice was done when they gave you a dishonorable
discharge. But that wasn’t enough for you. I am of the belief that
if your legs had been blown off or your sight had been taken from you
that would have been something you could have lived with so long as
all your men were ok. So let us talk no more about how you disobeyed
orders.
No, you have been kicking
yourself simply because a projectile hit George instead of you. Going
after those people was the right thing to do. It was the right
thing to do.
Only George’s death made it a mistake. I know that and so did
Claire.”
Herb’s eyes suddenly
moistened and he glanced around to notice that during their exchange
the room had filled up with people. Herb didn’t miss the fact that
at least half the assembled guests were Asian.
Greenwood let out a sigh and
said, “I thank you sir with all my heart for your forgiveness. It
is more than I deserve.”
Williams rose to his feet
with a look that was cool and confident.
“You’re a stubborn man,
Herb. But this matter has not been settled yet. And for crying out
loud, stop
calling me
sir.”
With that he turned his back
on the table and headed toward the back of a small area that served
as a stage.
“Where’s he going?”
Herb asked with concern.
“He’s going to reload,”
answered Nhu with a ghost of a smile.
“What?”
Suddenly a man in a Navy
style uniform appeared on the floor space that had been kept clear of
tables and chairs. He was an employee of the cruise ship and he was
carrying a cordless microphone. He gave the forty-two diners a well
practiced smile and brought the mike to his lips.
“Greetings one and all. The
buffet will be brought out shortly, but first we have some
entertainment for you; which I believe is no surprise to most of
you.”
“It is to me but I’d
rather have Williams back,” Herb whispered to Nhu.
“As I understand it, many
of you good folks are related to the young lady waiting in the next
room. So I’m sure I won’t have to coax you into giving her a warm
reception. Ladies and Gentlemen, I give you Chien Phan.”
Everyone applauded, even the
dozen or so diners who had no idea that a singer would be appearing
before the meal. The pretty young Asian lady smiled sweetly and held
her own cordless microphone with a dainty hand.
“Good evening one and all.
I hope to entertain you with a song that has recently been made
famous all over the world by the singer Celine Dion. But I would like
you all to know that my selection was not based on popularity, or
even my ability to sing in a particular key. The words are what
matter. You see, there is a man in the audience who is very special
to me, even though I’ve never spoken to him. I am here now to thank
him, because when I was little more than a baby, he not only risked
his life for me, he also changed his own life by sacrificing a
career. I cannot change what has taken place. I can only share these
words that seem so very appropriate at this time.”
Then the beautiful woman
began to sing, and during the first three verses she seemed to be
gazing at some imaginary person who could have been in the back of
the room somewhere. But when she reached the fourth verse, a magical
thing occurred. Her eyes bored into Herb’s, and from then on, there
was just the two of them in all of time and space.
“You
were my strength when I was weak
You were my voice when I
couldn’t speak
You were my eyes when I
couldn’t see
You saw the best there was in
me
You lifted me up when I
couldn’t reach
You gave me faith cause you
believed
I’m everything I am because
you loved me
You gave me wings and made me
fly
You touched my hand so I
could touch the sky
I
lost my faith, you gave it back to me
You taught no star was out of
reach
You stood by me when I was
small
I
had your love, I had it all
Maybe I don’t know that
much
But I know this much is true
I
was blessed because I was loved by you
You
were my strength when I was weak
You were my voice when I
couldn’t speak
You were my eyes when I
couldn’t see
You saw the best there was in
me
You lifted me up when I
couldn’t reach
You gave me faith because you
believed
I’m everything I am because
you loved me
You were always there for me
The tender wind that carried
me
The light in the dark—shining
your love into my life
You’ve been my inspiration
Through the lies you were the
truth
My world is a better place
Because of yoooo…
The woman’s voice broke at
that point and every soul present felt suspended in the emotional
energies that filled the room. Then just as suddenly the young singer
regained her composure and finished the song with more power and
presence than what had been heard before. But there was one more
surprise coming at the end of the song. Without any prompting,
thirteen Asians rose from their seats and ushered with them five
offspring that were preadolescents. The people all assembled around
the young singer and as one they bowed to Herb.
The American rose to his feet
and returned a shorter bow, with the steely eyed appearance of a
Naval officer of years past. Herb wasn’t sure what he was supposed
to do after that, so he just came forward to accept a hug and kiss
from Chien and then either a hug or hand shake from the others.
“Well, there goes the
mascara,” a teary eyed Nhu half joked when her husband finally
returned to their table.
The next three hours were the
best Herb had experienced in a very long time. Williams also had a
very good time, and threw Herb a funny little salute just before Herb
and Nhu stepped out onto the deck to look at the stars and the
promise of a wonderful tomorrow.
“A penny for your
thoughts,” the woman said when they reached the safety rail.
“Well---I’m thinking I
should go back to school.”
“You’re never too old,”
the woman responded with a nod.
Herb gazed out at the vast
expanse of water and said, “There’s always been this code of the
sea. Hasn’t always been obeyed of course.”
“Not enough Herb Greenwoods
in the world,” quipped Nhu.
Herb shrugged slightly and
said, “Maybe-----maybe a girl’s gratitude can trump the mistakes
I’ve made.”
“I think it will live
longer in people’s memories. I do believe that song was worth every
drink you ever spilled and every argument you ever ran out on.”
Herb turned and took Nhu by
the shoulders.
“I’m giving up drinking.
I really want to now.”
“I’m glad to hear that
Sweetie, but you know once we get back home I think you’ll find
that kicking the habit is a little tougher than if feels at the
moment.”
“Puppy Toes, need I remind
you that I have spent my life in a number of places where demon
rum was
both a neighbor and a shipmate? Yea, I know it ain’t gunna be
easy.”
“Then I think you should
move back in with me,” said Nhu. “Besides, I’m tired of guys
who think they have a shot at me just because we’ve been
separated.”
Herb gazed upon his own
personal hero and said, “You never asked for a divorce.”
“Well Herb---I guess I just
kept comparing our problems to that damn war.”
The man nodded and put his
arm around his wife.
“I guess we better get back
to my adoring public.”
“I think I’ll start a
scrap book,” Nhu said half to herself.
Arm in arm the couple walked
out of the dark and back into the light.