Matterhorn: a novel of the Vietnam War Page 52
Harreschou grunted. The big Army CH-47s had much more lift capacity than the CH-46s of the Marines, which were built smaller and had folding rotor blades to fit on carriers. That meant theyd need fewer of them than the 46s, but what if none were available and Neitzel had the 46s committed to the north? Harreschou didnt ask what he should do in that case. There was no answer and, as usual, he knew the Marines would make it work.
Colonel White cleared his throat. Ive got a lot of firebases hanging out there, Greg.
I know it, Willy, goddamn it. Neitzel paused. The divisons other infantry regiment, the Nineteenth Marines, had just returned from an operation in the south. They were ragged and exhausted, but they could at least hold firebases, even if they had to split companies. The artillerymen themselves could fill in on the perimeters where there werent enough infantrymen. On the other hand, with the gook regiments engaged, they wouldnt have enough capacity to also threaten very many firebases. Youll have grunts from Nineteenth Marines. Theyre pretty beat up, but they ought to be able to provide firebase security.
White nodded.
Neitzel turned to look at Mulvaney. When Bravo took that ridge away from their advanced elements it really set the gooks up. That was good work, Mike.
Dumb luck, Greg, Mulvaney replied. And I mean dumb. The sarcasm wasnt wasted on Harreschou, who cast a quick glance at his old friend Mulvaney. Theyd been together with First Division at Inchon. In fact, Mulvaney had served as Neitzels Three when Neitzel had Two-Nine during the Laos cluster-fuck; that was why he wasnt afraid to risk a sarcastic comment. Willy White had been to Amphibious Warfare School with Neitzel, and both of them had been young officers on Saipan. The Marine Corps was small, and personal relations often helped cut through the usual bureaucratic behavior and chickenshit that went with all military units, including the Corps.
Luck, Ill grant you, the general said, not picking up on Mulvaneys sarcasm. If Sweet Alice hadnt gotten into the shit wed have never launched the Bald Eagle. Bravo would never have assaulted the ridge. Shit, Mike, I know youre worried about Bravo up there. Sure its risky, but thats what the gooks dont expect of us. Weve been too cautious. War is risky.
He sat down in his stuffed leather chair and leaned back, looking at the operations map, his hands clasped behind his head. I dont think Nagoolian has the slightest fucking idea what we can deliver around that hill once we get these batteries shifted around. The whole fucking sky is going to fall on him. He looked up at Mulvaney. Can Bravo hold?
Mulvaney knew that Neitzel knew what was being asked. He also knew why. They were here to kill their countrys enemies. If this worked, they were going to kill a lot of them. Theyll hold, he said.
Neitzel watched Mulvaney intently for a moment; then he stood and walked over to the map. Nagoolian thought hed trapped a company, he said to no one in particular. He planted a large fist on the map right over Matterhorn. Were about to trap a regiment. He turned to face the three men. Lets just pray the bad weather and Bravo hold for one more day.
While the paperwork and helicopters shifted artillery batteries, matériel, and tired Marines through leaden skies, First Lieutenant Theodore J. Hawke collapsed on his bunk in the BOQ tent. Exhausted as he was, he couldnt sleep. He went over in his mind the myriad of details. Nowhere could he find a spot where he could be of any use.
Hawke sat up suddenly. Stevens, who was unlacing his boots and about to pass out, looked at Hawke, puzzled, but said nothing. Hawke began to drag equipment out from beneath his bunk.
What the fuck you doing? Stevens asked, yawning. He sat there with a boot in one hand.
Packing.
What for?
Its like the nesting instinct. I get it once a month.
Be that way, Stevens said. He dropped his boot to the floor and lay back with a sigh. My aching fucking feet, he moaned.
Hawke smiled as he began to put on his old bleached-out jungle boots. He picked up his .45, which had been lying on the floor in its holster and was already rusting. He looked at it disgustedly. He took it out and worked the action, then snorted. From the sound of it, there would be plenty of spare rifles. He slung on his cartridge belt with its canteens and belt suspenders and reached for his helmet and flak jacket. He carefully rolled his old stateside utility cover and put it in one of the voluminous pockets on the sides of his trousers. He attached his pear-can cup to the outside of his pack.
Stevens sat up. Youre not going up on the hill, are you? he asked. Hawke was stuffing his poncho liner into his pack and didnt bother answering. What will the Three say? I mean, did you clear it with him? Leaving your post without permission is serious shit, Hawke.
Stevens, the Three needs a Three Zulu like a fucking satyr needs a dildo. Theres two boot lieutenants up there and zero staff. Count them: zero. And a fucking herd of newbies scared shitless down here at the LZ. Besides, I already asked the Three.
Jesus, Stevens said, obviously surprised. Hard to believe he let you go.
He didnt.
Hawke walked out the door into the rain. He trudged down the muddy road toward the landing zone, feeling the familiar weight of the pack, the rain beginning to seep into his clothing, the mud and water squeezing in through the metal eyelets in his boots, making his socks wet. Mulvaney could keep his fucking company, he thought sadly and bitterly. There was only one company as far as he was concerned, and it was being destroyed while he did nothing but watch.
The feeling of action lasted the ten minutes it took Hawke to get down to the large LZ. Two CH-46 twin-bladed helicopters sat side by side on the airstrip, their fuselages scarred and pockmarked from hard use, their long rotor blades drooping in the rain. They looked abandoned. On the ground nearby were about forty replacements, huddled miserably beneath their ponchos.
Hawke could barely see across the little airfield. The clouds were so low to the ground that the rain seemed to materialize in the air around their heads. He realized that a chopper couldnt even find this airfield, much less Bravo Company, more than 3,000 feet higher in the mountains. And in five hours it would be dark.
He sat in the mud, knees pulled up beneath his poncho, and wondered what hed just done. He was disobeying a direct order, throwing away a career, to sit helplessly on this fucking piece of wet earth. He pulled his poncho tighter around his neck.
After about ten minutes he realized that two pairs of very black, very new boots were standing in front of him. He looked up. Two kids were shifting their weight back and forth, uncertain about the protocol of interrupting what was obviously a bush Marine in what was obviously an attempt to enter oblivion.
You with Bravo Company? one of them finally asked.
Hawke contemplated them quietly, noting how well-fed they looked. Finally he said, Can either of you think of any other fucking reason why someone would be sitting here in the rain?
That brought two tentative smiles.
Then Hawke noticed something. You got any machine-gun ammo someplace?
One of the kids said, surprised, No. Im an oh-three-eleven, referring to the military occupational specialty code of a Marine rifleman rather than the code of a machine gunner.
I dont give a fuck if youre a goddamned nuclear weapons expert. Did anyone give you any fucking machine-gun ammunition to carry? Hawke was no longer lethargic.
Uh, no, uh
Lieutenant, Hawke filled in for him.
Sorry, sir. I didnt know. I just
Whos in charge of this cluster-fuck?
Uh, I am, sir. Theres none of us above PFC, but I shot expert at Pendleton, so the guy with the radiothe one that has Shore Party on his sweatshirthe put me in charge.
Youre through being in charge.
Yes sir.
From now on you will be known as Jayhawk Zulu.
&nbs
p; Uh, yes sir. Jayhawk Zulu.
Can you find the battalion COC bunker?
I think so, sir.
I want you to find a staff sergeant named Cassidy. You tell him the Jayhawk wants him down on the LZ as soon as he can get here with as much machine-gun ammunition as forty very well-fed boot motherfuckers straight out of ITR can carry. He paused. And I mean barely carry. Hell do the interpreting.
The kid started to leave, but Hawke stopped him.
And a hundred sixty canteens full of water.
One hundred and sixty, sir?
Do I have to do the fucking math for you? Four times forty. OK? Counting the two everyone has on now, thats only six each.
Aye aye, sir.
If you dont get Cassidy here before this fog lifts, Ill kick your boot ass into Laos. He smiled at the kid and then gave him the curled talons sign and roared out, Hawk power! The kid gave his friend a quick glance and ran for the COC.
Within an hour Cassidy had joined Hawke at the LZ and every replacement was laden with machine-gun ammunition and water to the point where he could barely move. Hawke or Cassidy would walk up to each one and have him jump up and down. If the kid looked too lively theyd throw another belt of ammo across his shoulders until his knees were just short of buckling. Then Cassidy left and they were all sitting in the mud again, covered with ammunition and canteens.
Dont fucking worry, Hawke joked with them. He began to speak in a sonorous monotone. Come unto me all you who are burdened and heavy laden. Smiles appeared. He quickly turned on them. But I aint giving you fucking sinners any rest. He turned to one of the replacements who had cracked a smile. You think Im fucking Jesus or something? Do I look like Jesus to you?
Uh, no sir, the kid said. But others were now also trying to hide smiles.
Maybe you think I look like the Virgin Mary?
No, sir. Not evenno, sir!
Not even a little bit?
No, sir, the kid roared out.
Shit. And I even shaved this morning.
Smiles were breaking out.
Then Hawke turned serious. Youll be relieved of all your burdens, believe me. All you have to do is make it from the back of the chopper to someones hole. I dont think youll find that too difficult under the circumstances.
As usual, the combination of Hawkes sarcastic Boston twang and his natural empathy had the crowd well in hand. He kept staring out beyond the airstrip, however, looking for a break in the weather.
He saw a break at about 1500. The constant rain let up, and soon he saw the base of the hills, about a kilometer from the airstrip. He stood up, ran over to the CH-46s that sat at the runways edge, and roused a crew member who was asleep inside.
It took him a few minutes to persuade the man to call the pilots. At one point the man asked Hawke who the fuck he thought he was.
Im Captain Theodore Hawke, Twenty-Fourth Regiment assistant operations officer, Hawke lied, and goddamn it, if you dont get some fucking pilots in these birds ASAP Im going to have you and them standing tall in front of Colonel Mulvaney explaining why they let one of his companies get overrun because they wouldnt fly in some ammunition when we requested it.
Yes, sir, the crewman answered. By this time several other crewmen had shown up and were watching the scene silently. I dont know the call sign for the O-club, sir.
It took a few minutes, but the crewman got the frequency and call sign and raised a bored bartender. After some initial confusion about who was calling for what, a voice came on the radio that the crewman had switched over to speaker mode. What the fucks going on, Weaver?
Sir, I got the Twenty-Fourth Regiments assistant Three here wondering why were not flying. Over.
Tell the son of a bitch that were not flying because those fucking clouds have rocks in them. Over.
Uh, sir, hes right here listening in. Over.
There was a pause. Who is he? Over.
Hes, uh, Captain Hawke, sir. Twenty-Fourth Marines three shop. Over.
Captain? Put him on. Over. The voice sounded confident.
Hawke was handed the crewmans earphones with their attached microphone. What the fuck is going on here, Captain? This is Major Reynolds.
Outranked, even if he really had been a captain. In for a penny, in for a pound. Sir, I have a company of Marines that need resupply and the weathers cleared. Colonel Mulvaney wants these birds flying right now.
Captain, the weather hasnt cleared. Im looking at it right here, right now. And these birds arent flying if we dont have the weather hold lifted by Group. I dont care what the fuck some grunt colonel thinks. Ive got several million dollars worth of aircraft at risk here. Is that clear? Over.
Hawke didnt answer. Hed heard the shit about several million dollars worth of aircraft before. He handed the headset back to the crewman and began running across the airstrip for the O-club. In three minutes he burst through the screen door, dripping with sweat because of the heat trapped by his poncho. Faces turned from drinks, dice games, and cards to look at him. It wasnt hard to spot the pilots. Four of them, all in flight suits, were at the same table. Just right for bridge.
He walked over to their table. Is one of you Major Reynolds?
A rather overweight man with a florid face pushed back his chair and looked up at Hawke. Im Major Reynolds. Then in a mocking tone, Captain Hawke, I presume?
Sir, I can see the foothills. Thats one klick of visibility.
And I can see about a hundred feet of those fucking hills, and thats a hundred feet of visibilityup, Reynolds answered, pointing at the ceiling. And thats here at two hundred fifty feet above sea level. Your fucking company is at over five thousand feet above sea level. No fucking way, Captain. Not until we get VFR and a weather clear from MAG-39.
You dont know what its like at five thousand feet unless you go there.
I dont need to go there to know what its like. We had a weather bird out there an hour ago and its souped in from here to fucking Burma. He looked at his three comrades with a slight smile. Were in constant contact with Captain Bainford from First Battalion, and its his guys up there, not yours. Hes also got an enlisted forward air controller right on the spot. I think between us well get the job donehe paused slightlywhen its possible. Now just kindly let us do the flying, Captain.
The sudden rage of the combat infantry veteran flashed through Hawke. His hand went to the butt of his .45, but the pistol was hidden beneath his poncho. The fact that he would have to hike up the poncho to reach the weapon slowed him down just enough. For some reason, the image of Hippy, his M-60 cradled on his flak jacket, struggling through the bush on those ravaged feet, hit him. Breathe, he thought. He did. Then he thought again. Then he plunged.
Im not a captain and Im not the assistant Three at Regiment. Im Lieutenant Hawke, First Battalion S-3 Zulu and the former executive officer of Bravo Company. My guys are out of water and out of ammo and theyre dying up there. They need help. Eyebrows went up from all four of the pilots. I dont know fuck about flying, but I do know fuck about trying. You guys going to sit here playing cards or you going to try?
There was a long moment of silence. The pilots knew better than Hawke what was being asked of them. Under these conditions, groping nearly blind just above the trees because that was the only airspace in which they could see, one slight error in navigation, one second of inattention, one slight temperature shift that turned clear air into impenetrable fog, and they would see the side of the mountain for about one second before it killed them and all the Marines on board.
Hawke made one last desperate stab. Marines are in trouble. You afraid to help them?
A younger first lieutenant pushed back his chair. That fucking does it, he said. He slapped
his cards down and stood up. Hawke feared that hed pushed too hard. But the pilot looked over at his bridge partner, obviously his copilot. What do you think, Nickels?
Fuck. Nickels threw his cards on the table, faceup, and rose to his feet, followed by the first lieutenant.
Well, Major? the lieutenant asked. I believe weve been called chickenshit.
The florid man sighed and threw his cards onto the table. He rose from his chair, calling out to no one in particular, Anyone got a fucking jeep? I dont feel like walking to my own funeral.
And that was the true origin of the story, which later made the rounds of the Twenty-Fourth Marine Regiment and the Fifth Marine Division, that a grunt lieutenant had walked into the regimental O-club and pulled his pistol on four zoomies and threatened to kill them if they didnt fly the mission to save his old outfit.