It's All The Rage, Back In The World
Oceanview’s a nice name, conjuring up sweeping vista of a sandy
shoreline fringed by breakers, and a sapphire sea. Quite the place for a
vacation.
Well, maybe not, because Oceanview is in the dunes just
inland from the South China Sea, at the top right corner of the Republic of
Viet Nam, hard by the DMZ. The dunes are
lovely, yes, but they’ve got enough unexploded ordnance in them to start a
small war, to go along with our medium-sized one.
And, of course, on the other side of the DMZ you’ll find the Democratic Republic of Viet
Nam.
Oceanview wasn’t even a firebase, having no organic
artillery. It existed to monitor the DMZ, and call in naval gunfire, and tube
artillery from Con Thien and the Rockpile, to give Charlie’s infiltration
efforts a gold star for effort, but a red “x” for execution.
Charlie didn’t much like Oceanview, and its protection
consisted of Marine riflemen and a section of tanks; the tanks rotated out
every week.
We arrived for our week on a day I don’t remember, because
days of the week really didn’t matter – only DEROS did, for Sonny, Biff, and
me, that day was further off than was worth thinking about.
It was even further away for The Dude, since he’d
volunteered to extend for eighteen months. We thought he had a Vietnamese
girlfriend somewhere, since he spoke what sounded to us like fluent Vietnamese.
“Nah,” he’d say when pressed. “I’m staying because this is
the only place that makes nuoc mam like Mom used to.”
So The Dude – a blond-haired blue-eyed California – had a
mother who fed him that hallmark Vietnamese delicacy…fermented fish sauce.
Interesting, or completely fictional, and in Viet Nam, did it really matter
which?
Oceanview’s only recreation was taking the occasional shot
with the main gun at NVA fishing a few miles up the beach, past the Z. The 90mm
cannon wasn’t ranged for those distances, but with the tube elevated and the
tank parked upslope, it was possible to lob a ballistic shot into the right
area.
No one ever hit a fisherman, or probably ever would. That
made the game fun. Killing the poor jerks would have been a drag. But we sure
scared some, and there were some Olympic track hopefuls we sent roostertailing through the sand for
the shelter of the trees.
This was really Sonny’s forte, and he could get a guaranteed
underwear change every time. If they wore underwear. And with Biff’s brawny help loading, he could
get three shells in the air before the first one landed. And so went the week, on Uncle Sam's ammo dime.
Which was why the general’s visit was less of a pain than
things like that usually are. Broke the routine.
The general arrived in an APC, escorted by – thank, God! –
our relief. He was a shiny Marine two-star with a polished helmet and a
polished pistol belt and a wrinkled uniform that looked slept in. He had a nice
smile, and he was jovial when he came by the tank to say hi.
Well, until…
“Private, exactly WHAT is that thing around your neck?”
The Dude grinned. “It’s a little pendant, general. My mom
sent it to me. Wanna see?”
The Dude fished it out, looked at the shiny dangly thing,
and showed it to the Brass. “Aw, c’mon, man, it’s small. Might lose it in the
tank. Dig?”
I’d never seen a general turn that color before, nor make
that kind of sputtering, stuttering sound.
“Why, you…”
He was interrupted by a scrEEEECH – CLANGGGG!!!!!!!!!
Bad news. It was a B-40 rocket, and it had bounced off the
tank’s hull. Nice that it missed, but it meant that there was an RPG team out
there, and they were even now reloading. A second miss was unlikely.
The tank was parked side-on to the wire, revetted hull-down,
the gun tube pointing left. Sonny and Biff were into the turret as quickly as they
could move, and I jumped into the TC’s cupola, grabbed my binoculars, and
started scanning for the team. I hoped the next rocket wouldn’t take my head
off. That happened, sometimes.
There! Movement in the low scrub, by a distinctive bit of
shrubbery, fifty yards away. And they were fumbling, probably tired from having
infiltrated through the Z the night before.
“Sonny, I have control, track with the sight, big bush, looks like a tit
with a nipple. Under that.” I rotated
the turret with the override handle, walking Sonny onto the target.
“Ah gots ‘em. Biff, y’all wanna up some canister?”
Cannister is like a three-and-a half-inch diameter shotgun
shell, good for turning folks into pink mist.
“Up!” Biff clanged shut the breech.
“On the…”
And then time stood still, for I saw to my horror that the general
had moved around to the gun side, and was standing in line with the muzzle
brake, a short horizontal tube that made
a ‘T’ on the end of the main gun, and deflected combustion gasses sideways, to
reduce recoil. General Shiny was going to be really unhappy in a second.
Then he was gone, tackled by The Dude, and pinned to the
sand, flat.
“…WAAAYYY!”
The gun boomed, and flames shot out the sides of the muzzle
break, lighting off The Dude’s blouse. He rolled off the general and onto his
back, to douse the flames.
The RPG team was gone. Cannister sure cured clumsiness.
General Shiny got to his feet. He was caked in sand, and his
mouth hung open. He looked at me, and then looked at The Dude.
“Okay, son, that THING around your neck. Let’s have it.” He spoke at a shout. Tank guns are loud.
The Dude knew when he was done. He slipped the chain over
his head. The medallion said “LOVE” in two-stacked letters, the “O” leaning.
“It’s all the rage back in the world,” he said sadly.
“All the rage,” said the general. “Yeah.”
He reached up to his collar suddenly, and unpinned a star.
He held it out to The Dude. “Wanna trade?”
haha, General Shiny isn't so bad. ;) I still love The Dude. He's a cool cat if there ever was one. Your stories are so real. Part of me thinks they're at least based off real life events. Witnessed first hand?
ReplyDeletePretty good guess there, Rachael!
DeleteThe real-life Dude still lives.
It's a new world to me - and vivid. I had no idea how this scene would play out - kept me guessing right through..!
ReplyDeleteThank you, Ruth! I'm glad you enjoyed it...I certainly enjoyed writing it. And I had no idea how it would play out, either, until my typing fingers uncovered the secret.
Delete