THE BRIDGE OF DEATHS
by M.C.V. Egan
OVERVIEW
Follow Bill and Maggie in London 2010 as they
explore the events of August 15th 1939. When at the brink of World War II,
an English plane crashed and sunk in Danish waters. Five deaths were reported:
two Standard Oil of New Jersey employees, a German Corporate Lawyer, an English
member of Parliament, and a crew member for the airline. Bill and Maggie
find a conceivable version of the events.
PURCHASE LINKS
AUTHOR LINK
The Bridge of Deaths Facebook Page
The
story really starts in 1971, when I was 18.
At that time, United States male citizens were required to register for
the draft within five days of their 18th birthday. The reality of my life still had not hit me.
I was a senior in high school and life was comfortable.
The
next year (my 19th) I received a “random sequence number”. This placed your order of call for
induction. The process was fair. There were two large baskets, each with 365
ping pong balls. The first basket of
balls contained every calendar day of the year.
The second basket of balls was individually numbered 1-365. A ball would be drawn out of basket one (the
date) and then a ball out of basket two (your number). The first date drawn was November 5 and the
matching number was 245. That meant all
those males, in this registration, born on November 5 would be the 245 group to
be drafted. My birthdate (January 3) was
matched with the sequence number of 42.
Reality started to set in—but not much.
I was
attending Towson State College then, my freshman year. I had a tee shirt that had T.S.C. on the
chest. I gloatingly joked that it stood
for “Tough Shit Charlie”. Several weeks
after that lottery drawing, I received a letter from the Selective Service
System requiring me to report to Fort Halberd, MD for a draft physical. There was no chance of getting a deferral for
the draft. The South East Asia conflict
was going strong and sentiment was strong on both sides of the fence regarding
support.
I
passed the physical without any issues and then received my new draft card with
the classification of “1-A”. I remember
sitting on the back porch that night and asking myself: “Is this real?”
Resigned
to the fact I was to be drafted, I went to the local selective service board to
see what options I had. I came home as an enlisted in The United States Marine
Corps. Mom was upset and crying and Dad
said nothing.
I
arrived at Parris Island two weeks later as a brash, cocky 19 year old kid on
the outside but scared shitless on the inside.
It was 4:30 AM when the bus pulled up and the Drill Instructor came on
the bus and in a “not so happy demeanor” to us to get off “his” bus. I shut up, got on the yellow footprints
painted on the sidewalk and grew up in maturity within the space of 10 minutes.
Basic
Training was difficult but manageable.
Six weeks later, I came home and Mom was all crying and Dad said
little. I was proud to show off my new
uniform. I was something. I was a Marine.
I
received my orders (Viet-Nam of course).
I remember saying little on the long flight to anyone. Getting off the
plane, the first thing my sense picked up was the smell of explosives in the
air. That was the norm. I then turned to my left and saw racks of
black plastic on a cart. “Get a good
look at it gentlemen. Those body bags
are how most of you will be going home”.
Okay—this is real—welcome to Southeast Asia.
Things
were quiet the first few days. We mostly got settled. Then—our first
patrol. I remember walking through mud
and forest area. Then, out of nowhere, artillery fire rang out and something
chipped off the tree next to me. It was pieces of bark from the tree fortunately
but it scared me. All of us on patrol
reacted as trained by falling to the ground, returning fire in the “spray and
pray” method. Fighting last only a few
minutes and I remember walking through on patrol doing “body count”. We came across several dead VC and then it
hit me. “Did I kill this person?” I
asked myself. I did not want to know. I
stared—very hard at his face and I can still see it clearly to this day (38
years later). We walked a little
further and came across a young solider that had his arm torn off. It was lying about two feet away. It was obvious that this arm belonged to that
soldier. Still, it was listed as “two kills”. Another dose of reality hit. American news every evening reported “number
of kills and number of wounded”. The counts were very much skewed. It made the people back home think we were
winning this crappy war.
Every
few days it would be the same routine, day in and day out. There would be patrolling, searching and
destroying, and just walking. I stopped
looking at a calendar. Days all meshed
in the same. We did have breaks at time
where we would get some R&R and spend time in Saigon where another type of
war was going on. Downtime Saigon was
alive with night clubs, girls looking to take advantage of anyone with money,
and thieves. One learned quickly to just
drink, say little to anyone you did not know and just observe.
Then it
would be back to reality. I remember one
patrol where we were pinned down by heavy artillery fire. Alan, my buddy, was next to me. We were talking back and forth trying to get
“lower than the dirt would allow us” in order to be safe. Alan was talking about going home soon and
driving his car he had just purchased. I laughed and then realized Alan was not
talking anymore. I looked at him and he was staring back at me. There was also
blood running down the side of his face. He said nothing but still had that
same goofy smile. His eyes though, did a
lot of screaming. I pulled him close to me and saw his wound. I knew he would not make it. I held Alan, almost like a mother holding her
son. The Corporal saw me and said nothing out loud but spoke volumes with a
simple nod of the head. Alan left this
world as I held him. I wanted to cry but
for some reason couldn’t. What was wrong with me that I could not cry? I did not realize then but I had become
hardened and grown up.
I
remember several days later going to Saigon again for an R&R. I did not
want to lose my money and just wanted to be alone. I walked and came across kids playing some
game with a deflated basketball. I watched and listened. I heard the most beautiful music in the
world: children laughing. Children—simple kids—were the real victims
in this stupid war. They were innocent
but had to endure what we adults (on both sides) were inflicting upon
them. Listening to the kids that day was
the best medicine anyone could have gotten.
Christmas
came and being alone at that time of the year hit me. It hit all of us in our
platoon. We had a tree and it looked
like a real “Charlie Brown” tree. It had mare bare branches than it did
needles. But it was ours. We decorated
it with scraps of metal and then things got quiet when one soldier started to
sing Silent Night. There were a lot of tears shed that day.
So life
continued, day in and day out. It was
the same thing each time. One day, I was
told to report to command and handed some papers. I was going home. Home—what a sweet sound. I had twenty minutes
to grab my gear and head home for the States.
I had made it. I was still alive.
I was lucky.
I flew
home and was, as per SOP, in full dress uniform. I had survived. I had several
lay-overs to get back to my family. I
was proud of my service. I was not a
rah-rah flag waver but I was someone that had done something important in his
life. I walked through the airport in
Chicago, my last stop before arriving back home. Crowds were everywhere. It was just before Thanksgiving. A large, dirty, unshaven, smelly individual
(I want to call him something else) came up to me. He had a voice that was so
loud that people turned to see what the disruption was. He looked straight into my eyes and put his
face about five inches from mine, called me a baby killer, and spat in my face.
God, I wanted to swing. I wanted to pulverize. I wanted revenge. But I could not move. I stood there, in this busy airport terminal,
and people stared in silence at this idiot’s actions and how I would respond.
There I
was; the returning war veteran, A United States Marine. What did the brave Marine do? I stood and cried. To be accused of taking
another’s life is degrading. Did I do that overseas? Did I kill someone? I had just done my job, what I was trained to
do. That’s all. The tears continued to roll. They were not sobs, just rivers down my
face. I turned and walked into the Men’s
Room. I changed into civilian clothes
for the remaining journey home. This was
totally against SOP but I did not care.
I
continued my flight home and had mixed emotions. I wanted to see my family but I did not want
questions. Mom hugged me and cried. Dad just shook my hand and said welcome
home. Nothing more? I wanted a hug from my father. I wanted to
hear him say “I love you to me”. Didn’t
get it.
There
was a big family dinner that night and afterwards I sat out on the porch
listening to a Baltimore Colts football game.
The stars were bright that night. It was cold and I didn’t care. I was
enjoying the chill after many months of hot, humid and shitty weather.
The
next few days went by without much fanfare and I started to job search. There was not much out there. Once people
heard I was a Viet-Nam veteran, they distanced themselves from me. It was almost as if they were avoiding the
war by avoiding me. I felt like an outcast.
I wanted to feel home.
I
learned quickly that it was better to not bring up my military service if at
all possible. It was more socially
acceptable. People could not
understand. I still don’t think they do.
Life
continued for me and I finally started to face some of my inner demons
regarding my service. My later life was
confusing. I married, had a daughter and then divorced. However, there was a twist. I was a single
dad who had custody of his kid. Not too
many people were in my situation and I was going to be the best I decided. My daughter and I were a great team. I was
proud of the young woman she became growing up.
It was best displayed when in the late 1980’s; I was dating a woman that
I had been seeing for some time. We took a day trip over to see The Wall. I had not been there yet. I had avoided it.
We
arrived on a crisp spring morning. I walked along the path, seeing the slabbed
timeline get larger with names. I had
written down Alan’s name and looked into a book that was there for people to
research. I found his name and I could
see his face very clearly in my mind back then. I walked to the specific slab
and started to count down the lines to his name. I saw it right away when I got to his
name---this granite wall is so highly polished that acts almost like a
mirror. I felt an electric shock go
through me and I stepped back saying nothing.
Again, tears started to roll down my face. This woman I had been dating
started to ask what was wrong. My
daughter, displaying wisdom that a 14 year old does normally not have, pulled
her arm back sharply and said “Leave him alone”. Two men came and stood next to me, at
attention and in total silence. They had veteran’s hats on. I composed myself and turned to say
hello. Before I could open my mouth,
each shook my hand and said only “Welcome Home” and walked away. I felt like a burden was off my
shoulders. Someone knew and someone
understood. Those two men said very
little but in actuality, they spoke volumes.
I silently thank them to this day.
Life goes
on and I am able to discuss some things but it is still hard. I still cannot
attend fireworks. The explosive shell leaves an essence in the air than reminds
me of Saigon. The school where I teach
recently had a Memorial Day presentation they had written and I was asked to
say a few words. My students knew I had been in the Marine Corps but they had
not heard any of my experiences. I
stood and could not say much. I told them
only of my love for this country and the flag.
I showed them a video clip of the late comedian Red Skelton’s pledge to
the flag (find it on You Tube if you have not seen it). One student read a story he had written about
Flanders Field and the Poppies. The
school band played TAPS and tears flowed.
Afterwards, we had a small social gathering and some students asked:
“Mr. T., we saw you crying at the end of the presentation. Were you sad?? I looked very clearly at their innocent faces
(remembering the faces of the kids in Viet-Nam) and I responded to their
question with “No, anything but” and turned away quickly. I knew I had made an impression as these
kids asked their home room teacher how someone could cry (looking sad) but be
happy at the same time. The teacher (who
knew of my service experiences) told me she scrapped her lesson plan that day
and they all had an open discussion. She
said the kids participated openly. She also commented that they were very quiet
(unusual for middle schoolers) as they left the room. She also told me they
seemed to leave the room walking a little taller. I smiled. The future will be okay.
6 comments:
Oh my God, Terry. I can't help it I have tears flowing down my cheeks. What an incredible, moving,sad and yet uplifting piece of writing this is. Your emotion was palpable. And in my very humble opinion, because, thank God, I have never had to face what you faced, those handshakes were far too long coming, but richly deserved. God bless you! x
Terry...you know well that the many times I have read this I have cried and felt so much!
I salute you! For doing what I could not do, staying the course. Though I was never drafted, I did join the Navy with the intention of seeing the world. It never occurred to me what my real purpose would be--to defend America at all costs. I was not prepared for that--to kill someone because I was ordered to. I have the upmost respect for all military personnel. What you/they endure is not easy nor is living with the aftermath. I am proud of you, in that you are at peace with yourself and able to participate/function in society.
This was so moving. I cannot imagine living through such warfare and coming back to lead the positive life you've led. You're an inspiration. Thank you for your service, and welcome home.
Oh, my God. What a powerful post. I couldn't help but cry. The experience of war is so sad, there are no winners and the ripples it creates touch even the youngest. You have gave us a terrific example, not only by bravely serving your country, but by living a positive life and teaching us with your example. Well done. Thanks for being an inspiration.
Thank you all for your nice comments. A large thank you goes out to Catalina Egan who has encouraged me to write more, not only to inform, but to heal.
The future is brighter. People today appreciate what the soldiers have endured. Maybe the Viet-Nam era did teach us something after all!
Now we all need to take things to the next level. Have peace (inside and out) and just believe.
Thank you again.
Terry
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