Read Michael Thomas Ford - Full Circle Online
Authors: Michael Thomas Ford
"I surrender." It was a phrase seldom heard, as the soldiers of the NVA were trained to fight to the death. But American forces had been blanketing the country with leaflets promising amnesty for those who surrendered voluntarily, and occasionally someone took us up on the offer. I looked into the man's face. He was young, just a man, and he was frightened. The bullet he'd taken had opened him up, and the front of his shirt carried a wide, wet stain. Still, I thought there might be a chance for him. We had any number of trained medics in camp, and with a little luck, the soldier might live to see his family again. I turned around and shouted for help getting him out as quickly as possible. Two men answered my call, one a newly-arrived private and one a sergeant on his third tour of duty.
"He's still alive," I said. "Help me get him out."
"Put him down, boys."
I looked up at him. "But he's alive," I said.
"Put him down," the sergeant repeated.
"He surrendered," I said, thinking perhaps the sergeant didn't realize what the situation was. "Chieu hoi, "the man said weakly, reinforcing my statement.
"He's a VC sapper," the sergeant countered. "They don't surrender."
By then a small group of soldiers had gathered around us to see what was going on. Andy was among them, and I saw him watching me as I argued with the sergeant. "But…" I said, trying again.
I could feel the eyes of my fellow soldiers on me, their collective desire to bring the moment to an end forging itself into a red-hot fire. I knew I wasn't going to win. Also, I wasn't entirely sure the sergeant was wrong. The man was an enemy. My enemy. Our enemy. He'd come there to kill, and only accident had turned him from hunter to hunted. If our roles were reversed, I told myself, he would show me no mercy.
I lifted my rifle and pressed the tip of the barrel to the injured man's forehead. As I looked into his face, I saw his eyelids flutter. At first I thought it was his reaction to what he must know was imminent death. Then I realized that he truly was dying at that moment. His lips parted and his chest fell one final time as his wound took its toll.
Focused on me, nobody else noticed that he was gone. I hesitated for an instant, then pulled the trigger, firing a bullet into the man's brain. His body jumped and then was still. The sergeant clapped me on the back.
After the death of the Vietnamese soldier, Andy treated me differently, as if the man had been a sacrifice I made to the gods in exchange for his attentions. I was now included in conversations about his missions, which increased as his prowess with the gun was proven time and again. His friends became my friends, and soon soldiers who'd barely spoken to me before that October night were calling me by name. I'd become a member of their fraternity, a society of brothers united not simply because we were soldiers, but because we'd seen combat.
That it was all based on a lie bothered me, mostly at night, when the soldier's face came to me and I heard his voice, soft and begging in my ear. Then I couldn't hide from the fact that I had shot a dead man. Would I have pulled the trigger if he had still been alive? I told myself I would have, but that was hardly better. I'd killed, twice, a man with no means of defending himself. The fact that he was an enemy changed nothing.
But the mind has a way of saving us from our devils, and mine rescued me by slowly changing the story, until after repeated tellings I convinced myself that I'd done my duty as a U.S. Army soldier and nothing more. When I reached a point where I could believe that without effort, I stopped thinking about it at all and simply enjoyed the status the incident earned me with Andy. We were spending more and more time together, much of it in bed when we could manage it and in any available spot when we couldn't. We made love inside bunkers, behind sandbags, and, once, in the belly of Andy's chopper while the rest of the crew slept off the weariness of a retrieval mission that had ended in five casualties. The holidays came and went. We had a turkey dinner at Thanksgiving, and at Christmas we decorated a palm tree with shell casings painted red and green. On Christmas morning, before the slicks took off on their assignments, one of the sergeants dressed up as Santa and handed out presents. Andy and I each received a week of R&R in Vung Tau, which we took three weeks later. Located on the southeast coast of Vietnam, Vung Tau is a beautiful seaside resort, a crooked finger of land dipping into the warm waters of the South China Sea. Once the base for Malay pirates who roamed the coastline in search of prey, it was given to the soldiers who liberated it from the bandits and became a destination for the wealthy families of Saigon. In 1971, at the time of our visit, it was the base of operations for both the U.S. and the Royal Australian Army support units, and as such was a popular location for in-country R&R.
Anything you wanted could be had in Vung Tau. A thriving industry had sprung up to service the troops, and the many shops and bars that lined the streets served up everything from hash to pho, whiskey to women. As we walked downtown on our first day, one little boy after another came up to us with an offer, mostly for drugs or sex with a sister, each one of whom was described as a "number-one cherry girl." We declined, until finally one young fellow, not more than nine years old, was so persistent in his offers of assistance that we agreed to hire him as a guide for the day at the exorbitant rate of two dollars. His name, he told us in surprisingly good English, was Duc, and Andy immediately decided to call him Donny, which the boy accepted with good humor. "Mickey Mouse's friend," he said. "Quack-quack."
Duc proved to be a fine guide. He suggested we rent a scooter, even haggling over the price for us. With Andy driving, me seated behind him, and Duc standing on the running board, we took the grand tour. Duc provided running commentary all the way, pointing out the various temples and shrines for which Vung Tau was known, and throwing in a bit of history while he was at it.
"That is Bach Dinh, the White Mansion," he informed us as we drove by an imposing house. "Than Thai, the crazy emperor, he locked up there by the French long time ago. And there is Lighthouse Mountain. An American lives there. Two kids my age. Sometimes we play in the tunnels under the mountain and sit on the big guns on top."
Duc looked thoughtfully in the direction of the old cannons, which probably hadn't worked since the end of World War II, and then at the feet and legs of Jesus. "Maybe you right," he said. "I look into it. Now we finish tour."
We continued on the road, which looped around the tip of the peninsula and ended back in town. By the time we arrived, it was late afternoon. Being winter, it was growing dark, and Vung Tau was coming to life as lights were turned on. The windows of the bars flashed with neon advertising beer and cigarettes, while the girls walking down the street were decked out in short skirts and high heels. A group of them eyed us brazenly, speaking to each other and laughing.
"You looking for boom boom?" Duc asked, noticing the exchange.
"No," I said. "No boom boom."
"Why not?" he said. "You want boy instead? I can get for you if you want."
"No, Donny, no boys," Andy said quickly. "What other kind of boom boom you got?" Duc grinned. "Number-one cherry," he said. "You come with me."
Behind him, Duc called out, "Come on. This way."
"You heard the man," Andy said. "You can't keep Donny waiting all night."
"All right," I said. "All right. Let's go."
As we followed Duc through the streets, I kept telling myself nothing would happen. Probably we'd end up at some bar, Andy would have too much to drink, and I'd have to carry him back to the hotel. Maybe I would even make sure he drank too much.
"In here," Duc said after we'd been walking for five minutes. "This good place." We were standing in front of what looked like a small hotel. I looked up at the sign above the entrance.
"Cherry Blossom House," I read.
"What I tell you?" said Duc. "Number-one cherry girls. You go in."
Andy fished some coins out of his pocket and handed them to Duc.
"Here you go, Donald Duck. Don't wait up for us. Maybe we'll see you tomorrow." "Okay," Duc said, counting his money. "Tomorrow."
We pushed aside the strings of pink and red beads that covered the doorway and went inside. True to its name, the Cherry Blossom House was painted all in pink. The big main room was set up as a bar with tables and, in one corner, a jukebox that was currently playing Frank Sinatra. The tables were filled with soldiers, and girls moved from man to man, offering drinks or stopping to talk. Some sat on the men's laps, rubbing their heads and whispering in their ears.
Andy asked her, taking out his wallet.
The girl sat on his lap and put her arms around his neck. "No charge," she said. "I like GIs."
"You like cherry?" she asked.
"We love cherry," Andy said, and Mai laughed.
I drank my beer and watched while Mai flirted. I found it interesting that no girl came to talk to me, but was secretly relieved to be left alone. I didn't know what Andy expected me to do. He knew I wasn't looking for that kind of fun. Or did he? It occurred to me that maybe he thought I only had sex with him because it was easy. But he'd known about me and Jack. Had he forgotten already? I couldn't imagine he had, but watching him get more and more cozy with Mai, I began to suspect he had. Three beers later, Mai got down to business. "You want to go upstairs?" she asked. She was still sitting on Andy's lap. His hand was on her thigh, and she was pressing her breasts against him.
"I don't know," Andy said, clearly toying with her. "Will you make it worth my time?" "Sure, sure," Mai said. "We do everything." She looked over at me.
"Your friend, too. If you want."
No, I didn't want, at least not with Mai. But I also didn't want Andy to be alone with her while I waited downstairs thinking about what they were doing and probably being stuck with a hefty tab after drinking the bar's beer and not paying for a girl. If I couldn't have him to myself, I figured I'd take the next best thing.
"Why not?" I said, draining my beer for every drop of courage I could get. Mai got up and led us through a doorway and up a flight of stairs that smelled like disinfectant and some overly flowery air freshener. At the top, we passed a shrine with a statue of Buddha, three oranges and a burning stick of incense resting at his feet. The hallway we were in was carpeted, the same bright pink as the rest of the place, and the doors were painted red. Mai stopped at one halfway down the hall and opened it.
Inside was a small bedroom, filled almost wall-to-wall by the bed, which was covered, I was surprised to see, not in pink, but white sheets. A cheap paper lantern covered the lone light bulb hanging from the ceiling, and a noisy fan whirred from its place on top of a battered dresser. Next to it was a framed photograph of an old woman standing awkwardly in front of a nondescript house of the sort seen all over the Vietnamese countryside, her hands folded in front of her. As we filed in and Mai shut the door behind us, I found myself wondering if she actually lived there, and if the woman in the photograph was her mother.