Places in Time: Schofield Barracks, 1970

We were garrison troops in Hawaii during the Vietnam War. The temperature on Oahu was the usual 78 degrees, with breezes coming in from the west, carrying the scent of sugar cane and pineapple from surrounding plantations.  I spent my duty hours at the base, but my off-duty time was devoted to the northern coast.  

In 1970, the North Shore was not yet overrun by tourists, but there were still a lot of cars traveling the two lane highway which curved along the northern coastline, past Haleiwa towards the famous surfing spots of Sunset Beach and Waimea, then on to the less populated windward side of the island. There were turnoffs along the way, for public beaches, where old station wagons and vans, with surfboards tied to their roofs, would pull off, depositing true surfers for the best waves in the world.  The waves were five feet to ten feet.  During winter they would get up to 20 feet and create pipelines and come roaring in. The sound was fearsome.   

The surfers were in their late teens. The boys were shirtless in hip hugging swim trunks, and the girls wore bikinis and sandals, and all were tanned dark brown from the sun.  You would see them at the wooden shacks converted into small markets dotting the roadside.  There were no surfboard shops or other signs of population around, as the north shore was still pretty untouched.  As you sat on picnic tables at the turnoffs, you would see a string of surfers out on the water, spread out in a line, about seventy yards out, sitting or lying side by side on their boards, bobbing up and down with the swells, waiting for the right wave.  

There were palm trees everywhere and the breezes blew the branches and carried the salty smell of the ocean.  The beaches were sandy, interspersed with rubbery water plant.  The overall effect was of green and tan landscape with gradual hills leading down to the shore, next to an expansive gray ocean under a light blue cloudless sky.  

It was here that I learned to love night on the beach, and would wait until late to return to Schofield Barracks, about 15 miles inland, a large Army base housing the 25th Infantry Division.

We were housed in tan-colored, three-story barracks clustered into quadrangles. Soldiers would stand on the landings on each level, leaning against the railings, smoking, milling around, and talking, looking out at the parade ground in the center of the quad, watching troops going through close order drill or running laps around the street.  Wooden screen doors led from the landings into large bays, where low partitions divided the large space into small sections, four bunks in each. NCOs had private rooms in the back.    

Most of the time, the troops would sit on their bunks, cleaning equipment and talking, when they were not being loaded into trucks for maneuvers.  You could hear their chatter from the landing, along with the slide of metal on metal, of rifles being assembled and cleaned.  The smell was a mixture of rifle oil, and shoe polish. Some men were running oilcloths through rifle barrels. Off duty soldiers were wearing t-shirts, and green fatigue pants bloused into laced-up combat boots.  Some wore their dog tags over the t-shirts.  Each floor held a rifle platoon of about 45 men.

In the mornings, each unit on post would form into platoons, call roll, and head out for a 3-5 mile run.  You could hear the shuffling cadence echoing throughout the post to the accompaniment of boots on cement: “Viet Nam, na, na—nam; Viet na, na, nam– every night when you’re sleepin’, Charlie cong comes a creepin’, — in the ni-ii- ii- night, in the night,”  or “I’ve got a problem, five thousand miles away, got to get home to the problem, get things squared away.”   

There was an interesting assembly of men in the barracks, divided into two main groups. On the one hand, were the veteran enlisted men, who had returned from one-year tours in Vietnam, some from the 9th Infantry, from the Delta, others from the 25th, from Cu Chi. Most were not good garrison soldiers, caring little how their boots and uniforms looked after fighting in the Vietnamese mud. They wore longer than permissible hair and there was little, if any, military formality between them and their sergeants.

They just went along for the ride on maneuvers, playing the training game to the minimum. Many were coming to the end of their enlistments and had “short calendars” on their walls, marking off the days. A lot smoked marijuana against regulations, and they really didn’t give a damn about anything. They were the true lost generation, burnt out and disillusioned. And they were rowdy, tearing up the nearby towns and bars on weekends.   

The second group, which I belonged to, comprised the new troops, mainly drafted, who had finished basic and advanced infantry training and were probably never going to Vietnam since the division was being pulled back under a policy of “Vietnamization,” turning the war over to the south Vietnamese. 

Half of these were college grads, who chose not to be officers. The other half was high school graduates or dropouts.  A few of these had enlisted, promised by recruiters that they could be telephone linemen or technicians, ending up to their surprise in the infantry. The two groups, the college grads and high school kids, didn’t really mingle much, staying within their own groups.  The college grads were better motivated, and, therefore, obtained the promotions. 

One of the sergeants walked into the barracks, carrying a clipboard in hand.  

“ LeCocq” he yelled.

“ Here, Sergeant,” I replied.

“ Report to the chow hall, you have to take Gonzales’ KP duty.  He reported in sick. “ Wonderful, I thought, another day of cleaning pots and pans.

“ Fine, Sergeant,” I said, “but, you know I pulled extra KP just last week.”

“ Can’t do anything ‘bout it,” he answered.  Guys like Sergeant Black were not going to be talked out of it, of going back to the roster to get someone else.  

Black was not a “kiss ass” for the higher-ups, and he would stand up for a soldier in his unit if needed, but he picked his battles, and wouldn’t get excited over something like kitchen patrol.  In this case, he probably knew I was picked because I was on First Sergeant Tanaka’s shit list, and even Black wouldn’t cross the company First Sergeant.  No one would. The First Sergeant ran the company, rather than the Captain, who was seldom around. 

Black had the entire platoon’s respect. He wore the most coveted decoration, the Combat Infantrymans’ Badge, or “CIB,” sewn over his right fatigue pocket, a black musket with laurels on green background, only given to those who had seen combat. He also had a Bronze Star, which was a real Bronze Star, according to the rumors, and his respectful but knowledgeable manner added up to the ability to make men do the undesirable.  Black was a draftee, who had earned his rank in Nam.  He didn’t let the stripes go to his head, but he had a certain air of authority, without trying, and a look in his eye saying he would get his way.  He seldom smiled, but was a soldier’s soldier, typical of his blue collar Pennsylvania background.  Most important, he wasn’t a “lifer,” or “G.I,” “government issue,” by- the-book, type. He would be leaving the Army in May.

Black hung around the barracks for a while, watching a couple of poker games, and came over to offer me a cigarette. I hadn’t really gotten to know him very well, but we would be working closely together since I was on the list for promotion to Sergeant. I noticed he had the usual Vietnam wound, a thin black scar, about an inch long, like a scab, running along the outside of the wrist in his case.  It seemed everyone who went to Vietnam came back with a scar. I didn’t know any who escaped untouched.   

Black lit up. “Hear you’re thinking of putting in a 10-49,” he said.  10-49 was application for transfer to Viet Nam.  I had the romantic notion I was missing the war.  

“ Yeah,” I said, “I ‘m thinking of it, but I would have to extend in the Army to get the required year in Nam.” 

“ You want advice from a guy who just got back?”  Black asked.

“ Sure,” I said.

“ We’re losing two hundred guys a week, killed. And, I’d say another thousand wounded. All from the infantry, maybe 50,000 guys, a tenth of our total troop strength.”  Black loved mathematics, and was always into numbers. “That makes the odds pretty bad, especially for a Sergeant. I’d say the odds are one-in-three, to one-in-four of getting seriously wounded or killed. And, it’s mainly a matter of random luck, not skill. Just so you know what you’re signing up for.  If I had it to do over, I wouldn’t have gone, but I didn’t get a choice.“ 

I started to answer, but he interrupted, tapping my arm, sensing my motives, “and the glory of being a combat veteran would be outweighed by the risk of getting seriously fucked up for good, un-repairable in whole.  There is more future benefit in foregoing the war experience and making up for it with a Master’s degree in international relations. That‘s cache’ without the risk.”  

Black sat back and smoked his cigarette, looking at me, smiling at his knowledge about the grad school acceptance I was preparing to abandon. I hadn’t told anyone about that.  He must have heard from the company clerk.   

“ Gotta go,” he said, nodding in the direction of the First Sergeant’s office, and adding “try not to piss off Tanaka. Believe it or not, he’s not so bad.”  Black winked and was gone. 

He was right, I wouldn’t believe Tanaka was not so bad. Tanaka had put me on KP three weeks in a row, just for a smartass remark I made during a training lecture. He was tough as nails despite being about 5’5”, Japanese Hawaiian, smart, the ones imported as pineapple pickers and ended up owning the islands.  As First Sergeant, he controlled all duty rosters and could dump on anyone he saw fit.  There was no due process. 

When I was on kitchen patrol the second week, Tanaka came through the mess hall to inspect, saw me scrubbing pots and pans, and said “LeCocq, you’re a good soldier, and I expect a lot out of you. Keep a positive attitude, and I will keep you off KP in the future.”  Rather than be appreciative that a First Sergeant had acknowledged a mere PFC, I answered that he “needn’t worry about me, I can handle all the KP the army can dish out.” I had taken a chance, but had respectfully added “First Sergeant” at the end.  

He stormed out.  Surprisingly, when it came time to approve my application for battalion drill team, he signed off.  But, when an opportunity came up for a job with the battalion newspaper, which would have gotten me out of the trenches, he denied.  He wanted me out there as a fire team leader, learning all I could.  Maybe he mistakenly thought I would consider an Army career, knowing that I had been in college ROTC and studied military history. 

Once, in the field, he came by our platoon, and had our squad abandon the foxholes we had just dug, moving to a new location on the line, just to keep us from getting slack.  He saw me carrying my M-16 rifle, and told the Platoon Sergeant to have me carry the M-60 machine gun from now on, which added 25 pounds to my pack.  i carried it for three months, and, out of spite, earned an expert marksman badge in it. i also received an expert marksman badge with the M-16, and scored high on Expert Infantry Badge trials.  None of this registered with him; he would still treat me tough in the field.  

I had noticed, however, that Tanaka, unlike most NCOs, knew almost every soldier by name.  He was not disliked, and was generally reasonable.  He was spit and polish and by the book, but had two tours in Vietnam under his belt, so he was also realistic.  The more senior sergeants in our company, the career military men, all in their thirties, whose opinion mattered to me, respected him, even as they didn’t respect most of the lieutenants. I usually got along well with those sergeants. I didn’t gripe all the time, and volunteered occasionally, and kept my appearance “strack,” or very crisp.  Nor did I make the mistake of so many of the college grads, of touting my college background.  I was a middle class kid and went to a state college in Texas.  I hid the fact that I no longer cared for the military.  

While talking to Black, I observed two soldiers sitting nearby on their cots playing cards when the duty NCO, a young sergeant just out of “shake and bake” school, 12 weeks of NCO training, with no combat experience and little time in the ranks, approached them. He said to the black soldier, “Clay, you got guard duty tonight, report to CQ at 1800 with full gear.”  Shake and Bakes were not respected by the veterans like Clay, and usually tried to overcompensate by appearing tough. Most lacked the natural leadership ability necessary for the job, but they knew map reading and orientation, and how to call in air support and artillery fire missions. The vets like Clay, however, knew all this anyway from Nam. They also knew what not to do by the book.

The black soldier, Private Clay, who liked to be known lately as “Fred Clay from L.A.” was a management challenge, generally high, and borderline insubordinate.  Hoping to scare off the young sergeant, he said “don’t be giving me no shit; I ain’t doin’ no guard duty tonight.  Give it to Rodriguez or Hanson, they never do shit.” 

The NCO replied “don’t worry Clay, they’ll get their turn tomorrow,” and walked off.  One thing about Shake and Bakes, they had learned in the Sergeants’ academy to be firm and unyielding, and not to get into negotiations about orders. 

Out on the landing, overlooking the parade field, platoon Staff Sergeants Fuerth and Marshall were talking.  I could overhear some of their conversation. They were both Nam veterans. Sergeant Fuerth was quiet and might yet decide to make a career of the Army. The senior NCOs and officers were certainly courting him, and had given him quick rank. He was the only one in the battalion who had won the Silver Star in combat, and was modest but serious in a good way.  No one knew much about him or got too close to him, except for the knowledge that he was from upstate New York, didn’t go to college, and had a wife back home.  He didn’t need to prove himself, since Silver Stars weren’t given out, and were often close to being Medals of Honor, for enlisted men. My guess was that Fuerth would get out.  

Sergeant Marshall was despised, called “lifer” for making a career of the army. Not all “lifers” were disliked, but Marshall liked the army bullshit a bit too much, and was said to have been a danger for his men in Vietnam. Private Rodriguez told me that Marshall, if he ever went back to Nam, would get killed for sure. He was too dumb to avoid danger and if the Cong didn’t get him, his own men would “frag” him, toss a grenade on him during a firefight.  Rodriguez said Marshall had led his squad across open fields into tree lines on numerous occasions, despite vigorous protests from the men.  

I sat next to Woodward in the dining hall that evening.  We were discussing the unit, who was leaving, and who was “re-uping.” Sergeant Fuerth’s name came up. Woody was Fuerth’s best friend in the unit, even though Woody was only a Spec 4 and Fuerth a Sergeant. 

Fuerth, Woody said in his down east, Maine accent, was shy by nature, which comes across as reserved.  Always cool in hot situations, and kept his wits, no matter what shit was coming down. Came from a big family, raised his younger brothers and sisters.  Family was eakin’ by, and dad ran off. He had to step up.  

“What about the day he got his silver star?,” I asked. 

Woody thought for a second, “our outpost came under heavy night attack. AK rounds cracking overhead, like when you hear them close.  You could tell by the firing that the gooks had broken parts of the perimeter.  Everyone was desperate and you could tell under the flares the enemy was probably regiment size. They had their whistles blowing and were NVA, you could see their pith helmets as they came on.  Fuerth got to an M-60, got someone to feed, and things got under control.”  

Woody continued, “Fuerth says he was no hero, just fighting for his life. it was all instinct.  No time to do anything but stand up and fight, or else play dead.  I mean those weren’t Viet Cong guerrillas in black pajamas and sandals. They were NVA regulars and regiment strength. RPG rounds going off everywhere.”  

“ What was Fuerth like outside of that?”

“ Normal.  Sometimes he would take his squad out on night ambush patrols, and if the situation was dicey, he would do the smart thing– go out beyond the perimeter and set up for the night.“

I knew what Woody was saying was true, that squads would go out just beyond the perimeter and sit up all night there, rather than at the designated point further out in the boonies, calling in periodic reports, “sit reps,” “situation negative,” i.e. no enemy activity so far. Those were the guys who came home, and brought their guys back.  No “body count” of enemy dead, but, as most of the guys said, the war didn’t mean nothin’ anyway. 

“ Of course,” Woody said, “lots of times, Fuerth would go through with night ambushes as directed.  Just depended on whether it made sense.”

I asked if Private Clay had been there when the outpost was almost overrun. I heard he had.  

“ Yeah,” Woody answered, “Clay was in the fight. After that, didn’t care if he went to ‘LBJ,’ he wasn’t going on any more patrols. Found ways of getting over.” 

LBJ was the name of the U.S. military prison: Long Binh Jail.

“ Sad thing about Clay,” Woody continued, “he was a good soldier, even in Nam for most the time.  All this garrison discipline is just alienating him, all the nit picking and harassment.  And, he changed since he went home for leave during the riots.  Now, he only hangs with the brothers and has nothing to do with the rest of us.”  

Woody knew that had happened to me. Clay and I had been friends, but all that changed after he got back from Watts. When he returned, he just looked at me sullenly and answered some jargon I couldn’t make out.  When I called his name for roll the next morning, he didn’t respond, and, when I made a point of it, he said he would throw my shaky ass off the landing. I reported this to the Captain, who had already seen Clay’s changed behavior, and told me, “handle it yourself,” joking that I was trying to ”agg-ervate Fred Clay from L.A.” 

Clay started wearing his uniform pants un-bloused, had a black woven bracelet around his wrist, and spent a lot of time doing strange, complicated handshakes with the other black soldiers. He took to calling me a “jive ass” after I tried to have a heart to heart and told him to lay off the dope.  His standard response to my instructions were to comply, but say “don’t mean nothin’’.” 

I thought Clay had buried our friendship, but once, later, at the post beer garden, a well known Bravo Company bully started taunting me over something, getting personal, pushing for a fight. No one seemed particularly anxious to step in, but I noticed that Clay, who was at a nearby table with the brothers, had moved his chair out a bit from the table, eyeballing the drunk, and giving me a glance that he was ready to help if I needed it. The brothers’ table got quiet. The drunk calmed down, and Clay resumed his conversation with the brothers as if nothing had happened. We never mentioned it. And we had disagreements after that. 

A couple of months later, when his tour was over, I waited on the sidewalk in front of the barracks to say goodbye as Clay walked towards his ride to the airport. He was with the other brothers so I just “good luck, Clay,” and waved as he passed. He just looked beyond me with his watery bloodshot eyes, and walked on to the car, but as they were getting in, he stopped and turned around, pointed to me, grinned, and said “LeCocq, be cool,” then turned back to the car. After that, the brothers were surprisingly friendly to me.

I would miss all these guys. Woody, a high school graduate and lobster fisherman, biding his time till he got back to the lobster boat, which his dad owned. He was a good soldier, but also didn’t like the crap that went with garrison duty.  His best pal was a high school track star from Albuquerque High, who somehow managed to win all the physical training tests, despite being a pack a day smoker and big boozer. He was looking forward to getting back to New Mexico, and might even go to college at UNM.  

Woody, Rodriguez, Black, and the other 9th Infantry Vietnam veterans, were good to me, but I didn’t join them in smoking pot and going to town, since I knew their reputation for getting in trouble. They were a close knit group, and intended to keep in contact after the service, exchanging addresses. 

This group left me with a lasting impression of Vietnam veterans, which is that they take care of each other, as well as strangers in need, and care for their fellow man. They would do anything for their buddies. After the war, I would see this close bonding among Vietnam veterans, holding motorcycle rallies to remember those left behind, and joining hands in front of a name on the Vietnam Memorial, not hiding their tears. They would help anyone on the street, taking some food to a homeless man that no one else would think of helping. It got so I could tell a Vietnam vet, even on a construction site, just because they were more human, concerned with suffering rather than superficiality. 

The war had changed them forever and made them learn to rely on their fellow man.  When they went back to graduate school, I would see them in class. They were always questioning conventional wisdom and searching for true meaning.  They hated pomp and form.  They were quick to make friends.  And, they were not only the most engaged students, almost on a mission, but you also found out they were holding down jobs that made a difference: physical therapists, nurses aides, social workers, probation counselors, prison teachers, and so forth.  

I would also miss the wonderful career professionals, like my platoon sergeant, Sergeant Taylor, a 40-year-old Texan who was a real professional and did a lot of mentoring, including me.  He was scheduled, like most career NCOs, for another combat tour.  There was Staff Sergeant Huddleston, who was from Tennessee hill country, a real Alvin York type, and the best natural soldier I ever saw.  He was always first up in the morning, tall, thin, tough as nails, a man of few words, and when he would wake each man up in the morning in the field with a soft kick to the leg and say “getup” in his flat twang, you did it.  He knew nature and terrain, and could out shoot and out hike anyone.  

After I made sergeant, I ignored Sergeant Black’s advice, and turned in a 1049, a form volunteering for transfer to Vietnam. If approved by the Company Commander, I would be off within a month.  But, a week after I turned it in, on Christmas Eve, First Sergeant Tanaka, dropped in unexpectedly to my room at the back of the barracks, carrying a manila envelope with my unapproved application to Vietnam.  

He tossed it on my bunk, and said in his tight Japanese voice that brooked no argument, “Sergeant LeCocq, this contains your 1049.  I have decided not to sign it, and not to submit it to Captain Jones.  You only have seven months left on your enlistment. To go to Vietnam, you would need to extend in the Army for an additional five months.”

He paused to let this sink in, then continued: “You can ask to extend, but I can say it’s not worth the paperwork.  The real reason I am not letting you go to Vietnam, is that you have a future, and I don’t want to see you wasted in some firefight in a lost war. Enjoy your Christmas present.” With that he turned and walked out. 

 

 

 

Bob

Bob was describing his World War II experience as a guard at the Papago POW camp in the Arizona desert near Phoenix, in what is now Scottsdale. I had heard the story at least twenty times before, but if I dared to interrupt him by throwing in one of his lines, he would grin and say “smart ass” and proceed unhindered. Bob was my uncle and I was the nephew closest to him. Although World War II was a small portion of his life, it was the formative event of his life.

We were driving east down Montana Avenue in El Paso, and, seeing a familiar cross street, he suddenly decided, in the midst of his POW narrative, that he wanted to show me a house where a woman had been murdered by the gangster John Wesley Hardin in 1949, when Bob was a crime reporter for the El Paso Times. We were looking for a restaurant to have lunch, and now he wanted to make a detour to an old crime scene.

Having talked him out of the detour, Bob was caught up in his POW story once again, telling me how fortunate he was that he never had to shoot a prisoner of war. “My attitude towards the prisoners,”he said, “changed after hearing about the death camps, and it came close to destroying me. When we made the German prisoners see the newsreels of Dachau, there was a moment of silence, then cries of ‘propaganda’ reverberated through the theater. We had some bad Nazis at the camp.”

Bob continued talking as I drove, “The leader of the prisoners was a former U-boat commander and a royal pain in the ass. On Hitler’s birthday, April 20, 1945, I made a routine inspection of the officer’s quarters and discovered he had cut a picture of Hitler from a magazine and tacked it to the wall. I walked over and ripped it off the wall, leaving the tacks. He jumped up from his cot and grabbed me violently by the arm. Instinctively, I slid my billy club out of its sheath and gave him a good crack behind the ear that sent him to the floor. He complained to the Red Cross, but I was, of course, cleared.”

“Another guy I had a problem with was an Ober Leutenant…”

Bob’s story was interrupted by an elderly driver’s un-signaled turn into our lane in front of us. Bob let out his standard admonishment in Spanish, “andelay pendeho,” which I thought meant “get out of the way, peasant.” I found out later that ‘pendeho’ didn’t mean peasant, but had a more sexual translation. I guess I, too, had picked up Bob’s phrase along the line, and my wife had to tell me it didn’t mean peasant and to stop saying it. Bob referred to almost everyone, anglo and hispanic, as “pendeho.”

Bob continued about the POW camp. ”I remember being so consumed with hate that I shook all over,’ he said. “One night, in particular, I remember relieving the guard on the tower so he could go to the latrine. As I was up there, I watched two prisoners walking for exercise around the compound. What irritated me was that, In spite of being prisoners, they exuded an atmosphere of command. These sub commanders were an arrogant bunch. I seriously wondered if I could machine gun one of these bastards and get away with it.”

”Didn’t you tell me that some of the German U-Boat officers at Papago were up for war crimes, for shelling civilians in the water after their ships went down?” I asked not so innocently.

“No, you silly bastard, you made that up,” then, realizing I had put him on, he grinned broadly, his teeth showing, and his face getting pink, wrapping his arms around his sides and scratching his ribs in excited laughter, as he often did when he got tickled. He loved a good challenge, and he reportedly had started this scratching mannerism as a highly nervous kid, or so the family claimed.

“Now listen,” he said, “and you might learn something from your good old uncle, slob.”

Bob always called everyone less intelligent than him, “slob,” but he generally made exception for me, his “favorite nephew,” as he called me in front of everyone. We had been bantering like this for years, and it was always good natured, except for a brief period in the 1960s, when I was wearing sandals, and long hair–way too liberal for him. Bob was one of those conservative Republicans who admired FDR. He was tough on defense and negative on Vietnam protesters. I used to tell him that his dad, a rare Democrat in Republican Iowa, would have horse whipped him for his Republican views. Bob never answered that. The whipping part was a little too close to home. He would change the subject.

Bob continued his story, “there were a lot of good German POWs, including Willi Schmidt, and Georg Werner, from Mainz, who taught me German. I told Werner that if he ever tried to run away, I would try to give him a break by firing one shot in the air, but the second shot, no matter how difficult to do, personally, would be right between the shoulder blades.”

Getting back on the subject of his anger, Bob explained “one night, as I sat in the machine gun nest in the guard tower, I was shaking and praying, and I had a ‘healing,’ putting it all out to God, who eased my hatred that night. You wouldn’t understand, today, how we felt about Germans and Japs then…” ”But, something happened,” Bob went on, “in addition to prayer, that shocked me out of that insane mesmerism…” ‘Mesmerism’ was a Christian Science term frequently used by the Church’s founder, Mary Baker Eddy.

”That night,” he said, “early in the evening, I was standing guard in the guard tower. There was a road that ran along next to the double wire fence which was the boundary of the confinement area. As I gazed along the fence with a spotlight, my beam picked up a jeep coming down the fence line, and running ahead of the jeep was a small dog…”

At the mention of a dog, Bob’s voice became a slight bit shaky, almost undetectable, except I knew him well. I smiled.

“What are you smiling at, you silly bastard,” Bob said, smiling himself at the fact that his emotion over dogs had been detected.

Bob resumed his story, “as I watched, the jeep came up alongside the running dog, and got ahead, the dog running for its life in mindless terror. The jeep stopped and the driver jumped out with a club and beat the dog to death with it…” Bob had to pause a second.

He continued, “this was such a brutal act that it left me stunned, and brought me back to my senses about killing anyone or anything. It took a helpless animal to bring me to my senses.”

As we were still driving, Bob, always impatient, was telling me to speed through yellow lights whenever we approached one. He would say to me “Gerade aus, John Randall, Gerade aus,” German for “proceed.” John Randall came from John Randall Dunn, a famous Christian Science hymn writer. Bob’s pressures to hurry were in good spirit, and I was used to it, and merely ignored him.

Bob continued on his POW narrative, moving on to a German escape attempt that I had heard several times before. “The German officers in the camp remained uncooperative, even if the German enlisted prisoners saw by 1944 that the end was in sight, and became more cooperative. The culmination of the officer’s resistance came on Christmas Eve, 1944, when 25 officers escaped through a tunnel which was an engineering marvel. They had planned the escape for months, and had rubber rafts which they had constructed in their barracks. And, they had, somehow, gotten civilian clothes, some dollars, and maps of the Phoenix area.”

“Based on those maps,” Bob continued, “they decided to raft down the old Arizona Canal built by ancient indians to the Salt River, and down it from Phoenix to Mexico. It was a sound plan, except the Salt River had been dry for years. Most were rounded up walking south down the empty arroyo. We really frog marched them back to camp, but they just smirked at us. Real Nazis, probably the best soldiers in the world, however. Some actually made it to Mexico, but were turned over to us by the Mexican authorities. Apparently, they thought Mexico would be more neutral, but Mexico was on the Allied side.“

“The escapees,” he went on, “were taken before courts martial held in camera. They were not told in advance of the trials, and were surprised when they were called out of morning roll call into the compound by grim soldiers who lined them up in platoon formation just outside the compound.” Bob noted that he was one of the new guards brought in at this time. “Fearful of some kind of resistance on their part, they were held grimly, with two guards apportioned to each prisoner. From the camp, they were marched out into the red rocks in a nearby portion of the desert. At this point, these former submarine officers feared that they were being taken into the desert to be shot. But, their attitude lightened as they saw their destination, a small compound with guard towers at each corner and barracks for 25 men.”

Here, Bob paused to see if I was still with him. He was seeing the events as if they happened yesterday.

“They were halted at the gates and told they would be imprisoned for two weeks under harsh conditions on a ration of sixteen ounces of bread a day and all the water they could drink.” Bob smiled at the memory, saying “there was much hilarity on the part of the prisoners when they learned of the punishment, in comparison with what would have been meted out in Germany. As names were called out, each prisoner swaggered into the new compound, no doubt secretly relieved.”

Bob stopped talking and started humming “Eine Kleine Nacht Musik,” one his favorite Mozart pieces. He knew all the classical works and could bring them up at will, humming them and jabbing the air with an imaginary baton, and going “dah, dah, dah, et cetera.” I knew this interruption in the life story of Bob Dodd meant he was thinking of food, always the Bob Dodd top priority. I also knew, given our location by now, that we would end up at Heinz’s family restaurant, a Swiss chalet-style steak house, with plush black leather dining chairs and a rather dark, velvet interior. It was a high class continental restaurant, with excellent German cuisine.

Bob never stooped to fast food dives, which to him were made for “Slobovius Americanus.” He always went first class, eating only one or two meals a day, but making those meals good ones. As he got older, he dispensed with the huge breakfast, and, thus, avoided my usual comment that: “you could take the boy out of the country, but not the country out of the boy.” Any reference to the farm boy was dangerous, however, since he could end up doing realistic crow calls at the table– “caw, caw, caw.” Bob was not often hungry, but made up for it with voracious eating habits when he did eat, usually cramming his mouth with food and talking with his mouth open while eating. This was good material for my cousins’ imitations of Bob.

“How about we stop at Jay Heinz’s,” Bob said, rubbing the palms of his hands together as if to warm them up, excited at the idea, which had just come to him. Grinning at me with a ‘let’s do it’ big toothy grin in anticipation, he clasped his sides and scratched them in excitement. I maneuvered into the right lane, since Heinz’s would be on that side.

“Sounds good.”

“Of course its good, if your old Uncle Bob says so.”

I had to admit that i always looked forward to Heinz’s. We always ordered the same thing, goulash. The proprietors, Jay and his father, “Pappy” Heinz, were friends of Bob’s, and would always come over and join us in Bob’s usual booth. Bob had several restaurants where he had “his” booth, his entitled standtisch as he called it. The discussions with the Heinzes were on an intellectual plane, assessing Toscanini, Camus, Freud, Richard Strauss, and other artists and Central European philosophers.

Over lunch, Bob was recounting our recent trip to the Civil War battlefields in Virginia, telling Jay about his grandfather, Sam Hindman, a Civil War veteran from an Ohio regiment, had fought at Gettysburg and marched in veterans’ parades in Winterset, Iowa as an old man. Bob described how he and I had followed Grant’s 1864 campaign through the Wilderness, Spotsylvania, Cold Harbor, and Petersburg. Using his almost photographic memory, Bob quoted the battlefield marker near Spotsylvania, which stated that 60,000 union troops had marched south along this road on a beautiful summer day of May 4, 1864, singing marching songs, little knowing that 20,000 of their number would not be returning with the survivors along this same road at the end of the next day’s battle. This marker had a profound effect on us, emphasizing the importance of fate in life. It was one of our historical icons.

Bob would often tell me how fate had taken him out of harm’s way when he was on maneuvers in Louisiana on Christmas Eve, 1942. According to his telling, he had just completed 24 hour guard duty with a splitting headache, and was looking forward to some time in the rack to sleep it off, when the Charge of Quarters came in and said everyone up, all hands have to help load rail cars. Bob protested, but found himself on the landing, still nursing a headache.

A jeep drove up and a Captain of the 254th Signal Corps Construction Company jumped out, calling for volunteers to join his unit which was shipping out immediately. He needed replacements for men on furlough and couldn’t make calls because of wartime security. Bob, partially out of anger and partially out of pain, quickly stepped forward and was signed up. He and five other volunteers joined their new unit on the train, where Bob got some badly needed sleep. The train then continued to Tucson, and then to Oakland, where the unit got malarial shots and shipped out to the Pacific.

After leaving Louisiana that night, the first they knew of their destination was on the train, realizing they were heading west to the Pacific coast rather than east to the Atlantic and European theater. As it turned out, of Bob and the five others who volunteered on that rail platform on Christmas Eve, only one was killed in combat. The unit Bob left that Christmas Eve, on the other hand, saw tough action at the Bulge and had a very low survivor rate. I always found it interesting that a one- in- six fatality rate was good. It was a tough war obviously.

We left the restaurant after our lunch, with Jay Heinz walking us to the door an asking about my folks. Getting into our car, Bob announced“prepare to depart,” a joke, which referred back to his return to the states from Hawaii during the war.  Apparently, as his ship had passed under the Golden Gate in 1944, a ship’s loudspeaker had bellowed out “prepare to disembark,” which, to the servicemen on board, sounded like “prepare to depart,” causing one angry solider to yell back furiously to the Captain’s bridge “hell no, we haven’t even arrived. I’m not going anywhere.” As a result, “prepare to depart” became a catch phrase bellowed by Bob, imitating a ship loudspeaker, anytime we we about to depart for anywhere.

During our travels together, Bob had introduced me to his numerous vignettes involving history, classical music, and his favorite writers. For Henry Miller, he would quote Tropic of Cancer about the fireman putting out a blaze at a Boston hospital and then taking liberties with the nurses. From Dylan Thomas, it was Bob’s personal mantra, “do not go gently into that last good night, fight, fight, against the dying of the light.” He would also quote Faulkner on the subject of Memphis, that ‘the Mississippi Delta starts the the lobby of the Peabody Hotel.’” And, he was particularly fond of quoting Hemingway’s Death in the Afternoon on bull fighting: ”the cow was never born that could drop the bull that could drop Joselito.”

In fact, Bob knew bull fighting first hand, having fought bulls in Mexico after the war. When I was a kid, he would take the entire family to bullfights at the huge Plaza Monumental bull ring in Juarez, leading us to the back of the arena, to the stalls where they kept the bulls. From these stalls, the bulls would charge out into the ring, into the light. This was the most exciting moment, since the bulls seemed so confident and scary and fast at first. There was no slowing them down. They would go in to the ring fast and charge across the diameter of the ring at full speed sometimes, just getting to know the turf and showing their displeasure. The bullfighter would appear from behind the fence and the bull would see him, spinning around and going right after him.

Bob had killed 36 bulls over two years, from 1946-47, and was, thus, able to explain to me the finer points of bullfighting, pointing out the bulls’ favorite place in the ring, the “querencia,” where it would be dangerous to go in after the bull. If someone was to die in that space, Bob would say, the bull will do the killing.

Bob would recall his last bullfight, in Tijuana, where he was worn out and weak in the terrible heat, and unable to kill the final, third, bull. He had to go into the bull’s territory, and remembered realizing that the bull was getting smarter as the fight went on, learning “Spanish,” as bullfighters say, starting to look for the man behind the cape. Bob would talk about the sick feeling in his stomach and in his mouth, that came with his fear of this particular, dangerous bull, amid the booing of the crowd. There was no way out, no way to just walk away or run out of the ring.

Bob was a good friend of a former bullfighter named Carlos Arusa, who raised fighting bulls at his nearby ranch in Chihuahua named Pasteje. Bob would drop by to watch Arusa’s staff training novice bullfighters on calves, recalling Arusa himself taunting a bull to make charge, saying “Mire, Manso, Mire Manso,” or ‘come on tame one, the one who can be bullied.’ The word “Manso” seemed to infuriate the bulls. Unfortunately, Arusa, who fought many bulls as a bandarillo, was killed in a car accident, so I never got to meet him. He was another one of Bob’s heroes.

Bob had been everywhere, and he showed me a lot of his stops. Boone, Iowa was where Mamie Eisenhower got sick, and my grandmother befriended her. Des Moines was the Tramor Ballroom where my parents met. San Francisco was the Cow Palace, Angel Island, and Pier 19 at the Embarcadero, where Bob had been billeted during the war, prior to shipping out. Bob showed me where all the soldiers had slept on the floor of the Cow Palace, and spoke of seeing Lana Turner, who gave some of the soldiers kisses as she left the USO show.

White Sands was where Bob saw Nike missiles tested. Los Alamos led to his descriptions of the making of the atom bomb, and the importance of the lens mold. Juarez was a court house where he interviewed the man who assassinated Trotsky. Ft. Ord was where he and I were stationed during different generations. Carizozo is where he and his dog Rusty slept on the lava beds while prospecting for uranium.

Bob was not successful in the conventional sense, working intermittently as a salesman and technical writer. He spent his time jogging and reading. He could not hold a job, but he was an intellectual and he lived a very full life. His stories and our travels together gave me a romantic outlook on life, and they also gave me an identity, fixing me in time and place, as part of a family and nation moving from the Civil War to World War II and beyond. Slob that I was, I did listen to my good old uncle, and I did learn some things.

On Faulkner

In 2010, I drove to Oxford, Mississippi to research William Faulkner.  The only thing I remember about the long drive down was a yellow tabby cat at the truck stop in Texarkana, catching bugs, happy, sleeping a bit on the grass where pets can walk, a bit fat, alone, apparently dropped off and left, no aware of its plight. I said a prayer for it as I headed off towards Little Rock. Knowing I would not be back that way. It was hard to drive away.

Arriving in Oxford, I went to the Faulkner sites: the the Anne Chandler house (Compson house), the Murray Faulkner house where he lived as a child, the bank his grandfather ran, the 1834 Nielson Department Store (the Snopes and Sartoris hardware store), the Rowan Oak mansion he purchased in 1933, after sale of Sanctuary, with cypress trees lining the walkway and with outbuildings, and his grave site at the cemetery. I also spent time at the University of Mississippi, where he lived in the Delta Psi dorm near ‘the Grove.” The Civil War was still present, in the cemetery at the University where seven hundred dead from Shiloh are buried, and the statue of the Confederate soldier in the city square, dedicated “to honor their patriotism.” I also travelled outside Oxford, the the area around Batesville, where Faulkner hunted deer every year, and Frenchman’s place and the northern suburbs where the fictional Sartoris Plantation was set. Yokanapathanawa County.

Downtown, on city square, I had shrimp and grits at City Grocery restaurant, tables lining the walls in the long, narrow room, brick walls, overhead fans, white tablecloths, bent wood chairs, and wooden floors. I spent some time in the Faulkner alcove, upstairs at Square Books. I walked around the central square, lined with two story wooden buildings, most with plantation shutters and some with wrought iron balconies and tables for eating. There was a calico cat sitting on the wooden walkway connecting the shops and buildings, Fortunes Ice Cream, Roosters Blues House, and Ajax Diner.

I am thinking of the Faulkner message, as he put it in his Nobel address. What is important is to re-discover the old universal truths. We have to find deep within ourselves the love, pity, and compassion, which make us human. By finding love, we can endure. Those who don’t find it, like the Snopes in The Hamlet, Mrs. Compson in The Sound and the Fury, and McLendon in “Dry September,” are doomed.

Faulkner also taught us about the importance of courage, another traditional value, illustrated best in “Odor of Verbena,” “The Bear,” and “Barn Burning.”

Faulkner taught how to write, to forget style and get it all down in a sort of stream of consciousness, run on sentences and all, the emotion coming through, the moments of illumination and inspiration coming with fast paced writing. Get it all down, on the head of a pin, the whole story and don’t worry about plot. Just string together myths, southern history. And Faulkner, the failed poet, taught the value of lyrical paragraphs. Write from the heart, about the heart and internal conflict, portraying a slice of life. It’s more about characters anyway, with images strung together.

Hemingway wrote about characters, but not in depth, just about how to live life in a violent world where things have lost their meaning. Faulkner goes into more depth. His characters were round. He is like Tim O’Brien, laying out how we feel inside, seeing our own weaknesses and the pathos we all feel, how we empathize when we see something sad happening to an individual, an outcast.

Critics have pointed out that there is a lot of social and economic determinism in Faulkner.  Plantation owners and slave descendants are tapped by their past and by “roles.”  There are sad endings and the bitterness of defeat and loss which began on Cemetery Ridge. There are few happy endings or examples of individuals overcoming adversity. Instead, we see a world of racist police, ineffectual white males, abused females, cynical parents, mixed race outcasts, and unenlightened  poor whites. African Americans suffer in trying to escape this society where judges are corrupt and the law perverted and ministers are hypocrites

But Faulkner is not a nihilist. The way to overcome this world is through elemental Christian virtues of self-restraint and mutual respect which involves forgiveness of others and oneself,  One needs a proper balance between pride and humility and a lot of charity.

Hemingway left us with wonderful characters: Santiago fighting the Marlin in the Gulf Stream, Catherine Barclay, dying heroically in Monreaux, Jake Barnes living stoically in Paris, and the old man in a clean, well lit, Madrid cafe.

Faulkner left us Quentin and his wonderful, tragic sister Caddy Compson, taking care of Benjy in The Sound and the Fury, Ellen the Fox in Sartoris, Drusilla Hawk in “Odor of Verbena,” Will Mayes in “Dry September,” Uncle Buddy in Go Down Moses, Bayard and Ringo in “Ambuscade,” Mrs. Armistad in “Spotted Horses,” Lucas Beauchamp in Intruder in the Dust, Nancy in “That Evening Sun,” and Jack Houston in The Hamlet.

I wish I had gone back to check on that cat in Texarkana.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Places and Times, El Paso, 1961

In 1961, when I was fourteen, El Paso had a population of about 200,000. I was used to Des Moines, about the same size, but Des Moines was more a matter of our south side neighborhood, and was older and traditional, but not as modern. El Paso was new, with ranch style housing spread over the desert and with wide freeways, palm-lined avenues, and sleek shopping centers. It resembled southern California, wide open, and spread over the desert and up against mountains.

Our family would come to El Paso on holidays, driving in from Roswell in our station wagon, two hundred miles through the mountains and desert, passing through the pines of Ruidoso and past adobe small towns, Tularosa and Alamogordo, then on through White Sands Missile Range, turning left towards the chiseled mountains of El Paso. The sunlight was overpowering, causing the desert to glitter. New subdivisions were under construction everywhere, consisting of stuccoed, cinder block houses with attached car ports, each house surrounded by low walls of large, tan colored stones encased in concrete. High above was the sun, a tensor point in white, but you couldn’t look at it for more than a second. The light blue sky was always cloudless, streaked with a few contrails from Air Force jets maneuvering high above.

For me, El Paso offered the feeling of modernity and promise never to be equalled. El Paso was the next Phoenix. Frankie Avalon was singing on the car radio, or was it Paul Anka, Ricky Nelson, Dion, or Fabian, the honeyed voice saying “Venus if you can, …” “Just put a little, sunlight in my hand…” Cars are high finned and sleek and pastel colored, two toned, the burgundy and white Plymouths, Chevys, or the more compact Ford Pintos, Volkswagen Beetles, and motor scooters.

Overlaid on this beautiful, modern city of the American West was the wonderful Hispanic culture, with Mexican food being a major discovery to anyone living there. There were family shopping trips in Juarez, across the border. This was at a time when there was little middle class in Mexico and I saw abject poverty for the first time. it was hard to take. My first contact was walking along the market streets, with poorly clothed, unwashed children in torn shirts and shoeless, coming up to ask if they could have a handout or watch our car for a dime. These memories do not go away. Occasionally, we would go to bullfights, going afterward for mango and strawberry juice atop the Hotel San Martin across from Juarez’s central market. The southwestern evenings were bright and things cooled down. The mountains took on a purple hue.

Although the Dodds were spread all over El Paso, they were mostly concentrated initially around Montana Avenue, and they were a very close knit family, doing almost everything together. On Sundays, they would all go to the Christian Science Church at the Scottish Rite building downtown, then all go out to lunch at Luby’s cafeteria, where there would be fifteen adults and kids spread along the table.

There were the family’s favorite eating places. Ardovado’s Italian family restaurant, which had the best shrimp pizza imaginable, a fetish I have been chasing every since, with the jumbo shrimp fresh and only partially smothered in the cheese. Cappetto’s on Montana Avenue had great veal. And, there was Elmer’s, which had the best tacos ever, with lots of shredded lettuce and spicy, hot sauce over melted cheese and ground beef inside a crispy shell, each taco wrapped individually in wax paper and placed in a paper tray for carry-out.

My cousins and I spent the days riding their scooters, a Vespa and Moto Guzzi, with me on the back, around the circular “Oasis” drive-ins with car hops taking orders on roller skates. Or, we would ride downtown to the ornate Plaza movie theater, or cruise up and down Piedras and Paisano Avenues running north and south between our aunts’ houses, or down Dyer. It was the time of the early Air Force jets, and my cousin Mark lived near Biggs Air Force Base, where we used to crawl between the wires onto the airstrip and lay down on our stomachs just off the end of the runway in the sand dunes. The jets would come at us down the runway, at first dots on the purple asphalt, sometimes with an orange glow in the center where the jet engine was, then getting larger, and halfway down the runway, lifting off and swooping up and over us with a great roar of engines. The military police, in their jeeps, would chase us off.

My uncle Bob was the storyteller in the family, reliving a lot of colorful childhood stories, some of which I had heard before. There was a lot of family lore, stories about my aunt’s appendicitis in Osceola, Iowa, which led the family to Christian Science, about the banker who absconded with my grandfather’s savings, and my grandfather’s horse, Bill, who was purchased by William Jennings Bryan, and who my grandfather called over to him once when Bryan was riding down Pennsylvania Avenue. There were tales of Iowa tornadoes and caves, and trains crossing the farm in the night, and one tale about the hired hand who almost killed my grandfather with a claw hammer, and who was tracked down by one of my mother’s half brothers.

The Dodds were typical of the changing America, a Midwest farming family who migrated west after World War II, taking sales jobs, and eventually spreading out as society became more mobile with each new generation. Ties to Iowa were ultimately lost. One cousin ended up in Phoenix; others in Tucson, Idaho, North Carolina, and California. My family moved to New Mexico, leaving only a sole cousin in El Paso. But, for me, El Paso is always 1961, on the back of a Vespa, the sun ever present, on the way to grandma’s house.

On F. Scott Fitzgerald

Sitting on the top floor of the Davidson Library at UCSB, looking out at the Channel Islands, their low gray mountains concealed by gray mist. The ocean is a dark blue, but with a few light blue currents running out like channels on the surface. I see only one sailboat, running with the rough wind and current, bobbing, its sails flapping.  I am reading F. Scott Fitzgerald.

I love Fitzgerald’s short stories, the way he displays human emotions and youthful romance, and the way he expresses people’s dreams, which are, as Malcolm Cowley said, the handle by which Fitzgerald takes hold of his characters. My favorites are stories from his early success years, 1919-24, stories full of glitter of the Jazz Age and Flappers, full of high spirit. This was a time when Fitzgerald was the spokesman for the era, defining it, along with Zelda. “Winter Dreams,” is perhaps the best of the lot, set in Lake Forest, about a poor boy, Dexter Green, who falls for debutante Judy Jones, based on Fitzgerald’s infatuation with Ginevra King while at Princeton. Winter Dreams is beautifully lyrical: “the sun went down with a riotous swirl of gold and varying blues and scarlets and left the dry, rustling night of Western summer. Dexter watched from the veranda of the Golf Club, watched the even overlap of the waters in the little wind, silver molasses under the harvest moon. Then the moon held a finger to her lips and the lake became a clear pool, pale and quiet… There was a fish jumping and a star shining and the lights around the lake were gleaming. Over on a dark peninsula a piano was playing the songs of last summer and of summers before that– songs from ‘Chin-Chin and ‘The Count of Luxembourg…”

“Absolution” is my second favorite, a fascinating psychological story, with interior monologues, about Catholic boyhood in North Dakota and a repressive father and society, and ending with a great passage: “it would be night in two to three hours, and all along the land there would be these blond northern girls and tall young men from the farms lying outside the wheat meadows, under the moon.” “Bernice Bobs Her Hair,” is about an Eu Claire girl in St. Paul, a beautiful portrait of the early 1919 era just after the war, as the Jazz Age is beginning, showing the old and the new, the modernist changes just starting to take place. “The Sensible Thing,” is about Scott and Zelda and their broken engagement and renewal of it, using the characters George O’Kelly and Jonquil Cary in Tennessee (vice Montgomery, Ala), where George, jilted, goes off to Peru and makes big money as a mining engineer, then returns for Jonquil. There is another great paragraph: George comes back and takes Jonquil for a walk, “…but a curious thing happened. George stepped aside to let her pass, but instead, she stood still and stared at him for a minute. It was not so much the look, which was not a smile, it was the moment of silence. They saw each other’s eyes and both took a short, fairly accelerated breath, and then they went on. That was all. Never would this April moment come again.” “The Jelly Bean” is another poor boy gets rich to deserve the rich girl to no avail story. Shades of The Great Gatsby to come.

Then I came to the second period of Fitzgerald’s writing, from publication of Gatsby in 1924, until Zelda’s first breakdown in 1930, stories of glamour and disillusionment. These are about the gaudy, rich age, and and how this age ultimately brought individuals down. The Lost Generation were victims of their time, of a historical moment. There are two short stories I particularly liked from this era, “The Rich Boy,” about a spoiled wealthy boy’s feelings of superiority and his inability to find love, displaying Fitzgerald’s curiosity about the rich and how their minds work, going to clubs for dinner with friends and living alone with a valet. “The Last of the Belles,” another story based on Zelda (Ailee Calhoun) and Scott’s courtship, this time set in a Tarleton, Georgia camp town, centers on the spoiled Ailee, against the backdrop of what they hear of the horrors of war going on. Fitzgerald drops one of those illuminating insights into the era and humanity: “As they danced on the floor, a three piece orchestra was playing ‘After You’re Gone,’ in a poignant and incomplete way that I can hear yet, as if each bar were ticking off a precious minute of that tune… it was a time of youth and war, and there was never so much love around.” Another illuminating paragraph: “And now the young men of Tarleton began drifting back from the ends of the earth, some with Canadian uniforms, some with crutches or empty sleeves. A returned battalion of National Guard paraded through the streets with open ranks for the dead, and then stepped down out of the romance forever and sold you things over the counters of local stores.” And, “it seemed she was bearing him off into the lost midsummer world of my early twenties, where time had stood still and charming girls, dimly seen like the past itself, still loitered along the dusky streets.”

Then the final act, (1930-40), as disaster comes to Fitzgerald, with Zelda in a sanitarium and Scott an alcoholic. This is a new type of story, more emotionally complicated, with less regret for the past, more dignity in the face of real sorrows. We see such tragedy in his most wonderful short story, “Babylon Revisited,” about a man named Charlie Wales, who is in Paris to see his daughter, but fails to regain custody as he recovers from alcoholism. It is a sad, touching story of a father’s love. Wales drops his young daughter off at his sister-in-law’s after a visitation day together. “All right, ‘good bye Dads, Dads, Dads, Dads,’ the daughter says. He stands out front and looks up at her window, waiting in the dark street until she appeared, all warm and glowing, in the window above, and kissed her fingers out into the night…” “Babylon” has beautiful lyrical passages of Paris: “Outside, the fire-red, ghost green signs shone smoothly through the tranquil rain. It was late afternoon, and the streets were in movement; the bistros gleamed… The Place de la Concord moved by in pink majesty.”

Then there is Fitzgerald’s second novel, Tender is the Night, one of my all-time favorites. Like all his works, there is glamour, with a lot of underlying thought. The story is about the decline of Dr. Dick Diver, who becomes an expatriate in France after World War I, his wife, Nicole, who suffers from schizophrenia, and the young actress Rosemary, with whom Diver has an affair.

Tender is the Night has beautiful lyrical passages which evoke the European Riviera and the time: “It was pleasant to drive back to the hotel in late afternoon, above a sea as mysteriously colored as the agates and cornelians of childhood, green as green milk, blue as laundry water, wine dark. It was pleasant to pass people eating outside their doors, … when they turned off the Corniche d’or and down to Gausse’s hotel through the darkening bands of trees, set one behind the other in many greens, the moon already hovered over the ruins of the aqueducts…” It is a novel of imagery and lyricism. “A false dawn sent the sky pressing through the tall French windows, and getting up, she walked out on the terrace, warm to her bare feet. There were secret noises in the air, an insistent bird achieved an ill-natured triumph with regularity in the trees above the tennis court; footfalls followed a round drive in the rear of the hotel, taking their tone in turn from the dust road, the crushed stone walk, the cement steps, then reversing the process and going away…” Even Hemingway admired Fitzgerald’s genius with words.

Fitzgerald is analyzing Diver’s decline, and looking at himself in the process a bit. Diver was corrupted by money and the times, and by his early successes and what people said about him, and he had some internal weaknesses going back to his childhood. He had been brilliant at Harvard and Hopkins, became a psychiatrist, and written some good early papers which got him attention from the Austrians. But, he was not perhaps serious enough, and succumbed to a young actress, and to his wife’s easy money, taking him out of the mainstream of his work, to the Riviera, to run a guest house. The conclusion seems to be that Dick Diver was never really solid enough, even though he attracted people with his charm and intelligence. He was a good psychologist at Hopkins, did a few good scholarly papers, but never advanced beyond that initial flash and was influenced by the admiration others showed for him. He practiced in Austria, met Nicole, his patient whom he married, got involved with the rich at Antibes, and fell for a young actress, who eventually moved on. Diver should have confined himself, as his wife’s sister said at the end, to his bicycle excursions on the Riviera. When people get out of their depth, they lose their heads, no matter how charming a bluff they put up. He fell eventually to alcohol and dissipation. He lost himself, as he said at one point, he wasn’t the same person he had been. He couldn’t tell what hour or month this had happened. “Once he had cut through things… but, at some point the spear had been blunted.” His psychiatrist business partner in Austria put it best: “Dick is no longer a serious man.” Dick was a bit of a romantic fool, like Fitzgerald, charged by illusions and imagination, but also destroyed by them.

At the end, Nicole is recovered, from years of just existing and taking care of the kids, and she and Dick are separated. He is, she hears from his occasional letters and from mutual friends, living in the Finger Lakes region of New York, in an inconsequential practice, still working on an unpublished treatise, having relationships with younger women, and ending up in smaller and smaller towns in the region. “Perhaps, she liked to think, his career was biding its time again, like Grant’s at Galena.”

The story is haunting and autobiographical, reminding the reader of Fitzgerald’s early phenom success, followed by his drinking, Rivera and Hollywood years, a downward spiral that led to his final heart attack in 1940 (age 44).  This is a novel less of external action than of internal consciousness. It is narrated. Fitzgerald is telling, not showing, unlike Hemingway. But, it has greatness in it. It is about how people re-define themselves as they go along in life, how they are defined by others based on their successes and failure.

 

A Simple Bus Ride

I remember how clear the day was, how beautiful, no clouds, just golden hills all around. We were bivouacked on Mauna Kea, one of two volcanic mountains on the Big Island of Hawaii. The Battalion was offering rides down to the coast to those of us with leave slips. Two Army buses, school buses painted olive drab, were waiting in the parking area, one going north to Hilo, the other southeast to Kona. Both were scheduled to depart at noon.

I was sitting on the bus to Hilo, when word came down that our bus would be delayed for about an hour. On a sudden impulse, I jumped up, grabbed my bag, and ran over to the Kona bus, getting a seat to myself in the middle on the driver’s side. In the Army, you didn’t take chances with something as important as leave; if your bus was delayed, it could get canceled and you could get stuck on guard duty. Within a few minutes, the Kona bus started up, the driver pulled the door shut, and we were off, heading over barren, slightly downhill mountainside terrain of the Parker Ranch, on a ninety minute run to the Kona coast, escorted by an Army jeep with a driver and sergeant wearing short sleeved khaki uniforms.

We were riding for about thirty minutes as the road was getting a bit steeper, with more frequent curves, winding slowly down the mountain road. We went around a couple of curves, and I could see beyond the road guards to lowland pastures below. On our right side, there was only the wall of the mountain.  I was sitting there, looking out the window and daydreaming, but was at some point aware that the bus was picking up speed considerably, and something seemed to be not quite right. As our speed increased, the soldiers in the bus began joking about the driver’s driving skills. Some were making loud bravado comments that we going to set a record to Kona. As we went faster and faster, maybe 70 miles per hour now, widely careening around curves and taking up both sides of the road, the laughter turned to concern and a couple of voices shouted “slow it down” and “stop the bus.” I could see out the right hand window that the bus was quickly overtaking the escort jeep, which was veering out of the way, the driver and sergeant having perplexed looks.

At this point, the driver yelled above the noise that the brakes were out, and we could hear him slamming the brake pedal repeatedly to the floorboard with no resistance. The transmission in the rear of the bus started making a loud thumping noise, and the driver was unable at this speed to downshift. You could hear him repeatedly trying to grind the gear shift into third gear with no luck. The bus became deadly silent. The driver yelled, “get under the seats” as we went sliding around a curve, this time almost, but not quite, tilting on two wheels, still somehow holding to the road.

Everyone, as instructed, stated climbing under the bench seats. But a few remained sitting. Some were yelling at the driver with various instructions. I hesitated in my seat a bit, watching the Parker Ranch stretch by to the side and below, and turned inward, alone in my own thoughts, aware of myself and blotting out the surrounding chaos. I was thinking that the driver must do something, probably crash the bus into the right side of the road, into the wall.  Maybe he could scrape the bus on the right side against the mountainside, using friction to slow down. It seemed the best chance– even to crash and roll on the highway rather than careen off a curve over a cliff. I was hoping he would crash now, that my mental telepathy would reach him.  By now, our speed was such that tires were constantly squealing. The driver was no longer trying to brake or downshift, he was focused on making it around curves. The bad thing, I could see from my window, was that the zig zagging mountain road ahead became even more treacherous, and the curves sharper and steeper, as the highway winded down the mountain. We were no longer on a moderate grade. There were few straightaway stretches before the next curve.

It was at this point, looking out the window when others were under their seats, and seeing my face reflected in the window, that I had sudden, strong, and knowing fear of my own mortality. What you hear is true. My life began speeding past my eyes, like a tape on fast forward, stopping three or four times to focus on a few moments. It was more or less chronological. I remember seeing myself as a grade schooler somewhere in Kansas, sitting at the table with my mom standing over the stove in the kitchen. For the first time, I could bring up a clear image of my face and hers when I was young. Then, the tape sped ahead without stopping through high school and showing my grandmother in Des Moines. For a microsecond it showed me studying in my dorm room at college. It could have been any routine day, any of the four years there. The images were all just average moments in my life, not special events. While the dorm room scene was in front of me, the thought came clearly to me, why had I labored and stayed up all night studying for exams, when it would all lead to nothing. I had wasted my time. It seemed rather silly all of a sudden as I saw myself again in the glass. What were the college efforts and dreams all for? It didn’t make sense. I had another thought at the same time, why did I make the mistake of getting off the Hilo bus at the last minute. If only I had stayed on that bus, I could still go on living for a lot more years. Now, because of that one simple mistake, I would die. If only I could somehow manage to go back to the point where I was sitting on the Hilo bus. Is that  somehow possible, I strangely wondered?

My thoughts of death were interrupted by my quick movement to get under the bus seat. It was a strange feeling, being down there under the bench. I couldn’t see anything, just hear the tires humming over the pavement and feeling the swaying movements of the bus. I remember focusing on the chipped gray paint spot on the bench leg I was gripping. Now, I realized, I was in real danger and the next two minutes would decide my life or death. I said the Christian Science mantra, the Scientific Statement of Being, that man is spiritual, not material, and that he is connected to God at all times. The driver would be guided to make the right decisions by divine science and divine truth, or God, which are in him and which go before our bus. A second later, we were off the road and bumping down a steep hillside, with all of us being jerked violently forward and backward as the bus hit mounds and depressions on the landscape, and with some seats breaking loose and some people screaming. I remember the bus hitting with the front fender, then hitting with the back fender, as if we were bucking, but we were not flipping over. I felt I now had a chance of surviving. Somehow, the driver, it appeared, had not lost control of the wheel as we ran headlong down the mountainside. Any slight turn of the wheels at that speed on a downhill run, I sensed, would still be disastrous, causing the bus to flip over and roll. What finally transpired was a ninety mile per hour run down a forty degree slope, down the hillside, never flipping or rolling, but just bucking and hitting the front and back bumpers in repeated succession during the ride down. As we finally rolled to a stop and pulled ourselves out from under the benches and debris, we noticed that the front and back windows were missing and the side windows were shattered, and that benches were strewn around inside. Most of the passengers had some minor injuries, dislocated shoulders and cuts and bruises, and two were hurt so seriously, one with broken clavicle and one with a broken back, that we had to make stretchers and lay them carefully on the grass outside while we called in a medical evacuation helicopter. It seemed that the only ones who were not hurt were the ones, like me, in the middle of the bus where the benches had remained intact. As evening approached, we were still bandaging the injured and evacuating a few by helicopter. We didn’t get back to the tents atop Mauna Kea till late that night.

The bus was towed off, a total wreck with the lower part of the front and back smashed inward, and some of the undercarriage exposed. The driver, who was cut and in tears, and shaking after getting the bus stopped, was awarded the Soldiers Medal, the highest medal possible for those displaying life saving bravery in a non-combat situation. He got it not only for his driving skill, keeping the bus upright while speeding down a fairly steep slope at high speed, but because he had the courage and sense to realize that the curves became sharper and the precipices more steep the further we went. He made the quick and tough decision to deliberately drive the racing bus off the highway on a short straightaway section, swinging left off the highway and down a sharp hillside at 90 miles per hour, flying off the road on four wheels and landing hard but flat on the down slope. As it turned out, he picked the last possible safe spot to take us off the mountain road. Beyond that point, there was nothing but sheer cliffs off the left side for ten miles. Delaying would have meant a short, wild ride on two wheels, with the bus eventually flying off a cliff.

Strangely enough, I never thought much about the incident or of the driver for the rest of my tour in Hawaii, back at Schofield Barracks on the main island of Oahu. I figured I had survived, and forgot about it. I had, perhaps, been meant to survive. Then, on my very last day in Oahu, a year later, an hour or two before going to the airport to fly home for good, I caught a surprising glimpse of the bus driver walking alone down the street by the Post Exchange. The PX was near the motor pool where the drivers worked. But, still, what a coincidence, seeing him again for the first time since the accident just as I was leaving Hawaii, going on with my life. It was as though I was being given a farewell reminder of what might have been. I might have never been here at the PX, standing in the sun, saying farewell, going on with the rest of my life.  It might have all ended a year ago.  Go ahead, I was being told, but don’t be smug.  We are mortal and chance plays a role.

Places and Times: Germany 1967

It was the summer of 1967. Frankfurt was beautiful and warm and sunny, with clear light blue skies. Flying in, I could see the flat countryside below, a patchwork of golden fields alternating with forests, and a low ridge of mountains to the East, towards the nearby Polish border.

Mercedes Benz and English Ford taxis ran down narrow cobblestone streets, with exit lanes separated from the main lanes by a row of slightly elevated alternating black and white painted bricks. There were billboards advertising “Ernte” and other German cigarettes. Esso gas stations, tucked into street corners, displayed a Bengal tiger and the slogan also seen in America, “I have a tiger in the tank.” It sounded better in German, “Ich hab’ den tiger im tank.” Everyone seemed to use bicycles and pubic transportation. There were bicycle racks everywhere. The streets were full of streetcars and well dressed Germans in expensive fabrics.

At a stand-up sidewalk cafe outside the train terminal, I ordered a Knockwurst and a half liter of dark beer, which came in a glass mug. There were two kinds of sausages, bratwurst or knockwirst, which came on a white plate with a side dab of dark mustard and a small stick to spread it on the sausage. There was also a side of potato salad on the same plate, along with the wurst and mustard. The beer was a lot richer than its American counterpart. I had two beers, and felt a bit light headed.

I got all this, including the beer for a dollar and a quarter. That was partially due to the favorable exchange rate, four Marks to the Dollar.
While standing there eating, I saw that Europe was even better than I had expected it to be. It was so different.from the U.S.  And, everything seemed so well designed with an aesthetic sense.  I practiced eating continental style, as I watched the other diners, holding my fork face down in my left hand to spear and guide food to my mouth, while keeping the knife in my right hand to cut the food and guide it onto the upside down fork.

The air was full of the aroma of sausages and beer, mixed with the pungent smells of nature coming from nearby parks and gardens and trees lining the boulevards. The music, which you could occasionally hear on the streets, was light rock, English lyrics sung with German accents, and a touch of background accordion and an “um- pa-pa” beat. The catchy tunes were repeated over and over in cafes and on taxi radios, “Memories of Heidelberg are Memories of You” and “I’m Just a Puppet on a String.” While looking up at the tops of Medieval, beamed buildings and at Gothic spires, I could hear the “clank-clank” ring of the streetcar as it took off beside me, picking up speed with a winding sound on the tracks.

I left Frankfurt that afternoon on a dark green “fast train” which made only a few stops. It had white letters saying “DB” for Deutches Bundesbahn enclosed in a narrow white frame on the locomotive, and “Frankfurt-Hamburg” stenciled on the side of each car. The cars were divided into glassed-in compartments, each with two benches facing each other. I shared a compartment with a young German couple and a Turk going north as a “gastarbeiter” or guest worker, like me. I looked out the window, watching the fields roll by, then passing small towns with crossing barriers blocking traffic at rail crossings, the cars lined up and waiting, followed by train stations flashing by for a second with a roar, as we passed the buildings, “whoosh-whoosh-whoosh,” and then they were gone. I could see occasional church steeples, and country roads, lined on both sides by trees, paralleling the tracks and shooting off into the distance.  As I got off the train at Verden/Aller late that afternoon, sixty miles south of Hamburg, the German couple in my compartment gave me the slang “Tchuss” farewell instead of “auf wiedersehen.” They wished me “viel gruss,” or a good stay in Germany.  I was surprised that the family I was assigned to live with was not waiting at the station.

While waiting at the almost deserted station to give the family some time to show, I walked out of the waiting room to the platform near the the tracks. There were dark green wooden benches, the color of the trains, under a large round clock. Looking across the tracks, I could see part of the downtown area, with small shops and their neatly lettered logos, and cobble stoned streets, and a large Gothic cathedral in the distance. The signs on buildings indicated a barber salon, or “frisseur,” a flower shop, a cafe, and others I couldn’t’ t make out. The buildings were mainly red brick or stone, and gave the city an older, more traditional German appearance than that of Frankfurt. Even though Verden was small, about 30,000 inhabitants, it did not look provincial. There were red and white bordered posters and signs with horse motifs everywhere, saying “Reiterstadt Verden,” or “horse capital, Verden.”

While looking around, I noticed to my left, at the far end of the platform, two stocky German boys bullying a thinner boy who was not wanting to fight. There didn’t seem to be any Germans around to intercede, but an elderly German man wearing a beret appeared, hurriedly walking his bicycle over. The older man said something in an ordering tone to the two, with an elder’s gruff authority. The two bullies then turned their attention to the elderly man, grabbing his bicycle from his grasp and throwing it to the ground. I could see the surprise in the face of the older man as he stepped back from the two and put his arm up in defense, but the larger youth punched the elder in the face, not too hard, but enough to cause him to stagger back and bend down at his knees to the ground, wiping his bleeding nose.  Then the two turned and casually walked away, not saying a word, while he was searching on the ground for his glasses. He found his glasses, calmly picked up his bike, and he and the younger victim shook hands and walked off their separate ways. It was as if nothing had happened.

I had been unprepared for violence like that. The Germans seemed pretty rugged, and I wondered if the culture wasn’t a bit more primitive.  I was shocked at the openness of it, and the fact that that the boy hit an elderly man with his fist. I had a hard time seeing this happening in America, and knew this first impression of Germany would last a long time.

After waiting a while at the station and failing in my attempt to use the pay phone, I caught a taxi to the smaller village where I was to work, about 20 miles away, along a two-lane, winding country road. The highway was narrow and the small European cars came fast around the curves and over the hills. We were passed by drivers flashing their front lights behind us to tell us they were coming by. The countryside was lush and the grass green and thick, and we went over rolling hills, with fields to the side separated by stone walls and hedges. There were woods as well in the uncleared stretches, and it was beginning to get a bit dark with a red glow of the very low setting sun behind them.  I noticed the instruments lights of the taxi for the fist time.

When we got to the village, I discovered it was just an intersection of two country roads, with three or four farm houses clustered around it, plus a “gasthaus” or tavern on the intersection corner, and a couple of large storage barns nearby. Nearby, in the fading light, I could see another five or six large white farm houses beyond tilled fields. It appeared this was a small community of perhaps a dozen farm families, and Gasthaus bar and restaurant.

“Are all of these private farms, I asked, practicing my German?”

“Yes, but they share farm machinery and barns. Everybody works together in the fields of all during harvest, “ernte.” So that was what the cigarette ads meant.

“Do they keep their own profits?” I was thinking they might be a communal arrangement of some kind.

“Naturally.” The driver got out and asked at the gasthouse for the particular farm where I was to work, which, it turned out, was just next door.

When he got back in, I said “are they wealthy?”

“Who?”

“The farmers here.”

“Black on white,” the driver said, which meant clearly so. “Maybe not so rich,” he thought it over, “and times are hard for farming, but these are old farms and are valuable, and have pigs and horses, the best in Europe. See the new Mercedes” he added, referring to the car in the drive as we were pulling up to the farm house. “The car and the tractors are all diesel, and share the pump.” The driver rubbed his thumb across his upturned finger tips together, meaning a way to save money, pointing to a large elevated barrel in the drive, with pump handle and hose coming from one side, and meter on the other.

“Why is there a gasthouse in such an unpopulated area? Is there enough business?”

“There are lot of people here in the area, “in der nahe,” which meant fairly close, not in the whole county, but “in the close villages.”

My new German family, which was hosting me for the summer, and with whom I had corresponded twice, came out to the taxi to meet me enthusiastically. There was a mother and father of my parents’ generation, perhaps a bit older, and two adult children, a son and daughter in their late twenties or early thirties, I guessed.

That first night, I sat at the kitchen table with the family, and we tried to understand each other. I was surprised to discover that my two years of college German were not enough to get by well. The family spoke a German dialect, “Plattdeutsch,” which I could not make out. Fortunately, the son spoke high German and helped out.

Our  conversation was interrupted by the alarm that one of the bulls had gotten loose in the stall with the cows, and we all ran out to drive him back into a separate stall with sticks, the women swatting from behind the fence, and the men going inside. Fortunately, the bull, who didn’t want to leave, was not aggressive. They laughed at my inexperience on a farm, and said, laughingly, one of my jobs would be to drive the bulls down the country roads from one pasture to another. They said we had better get to bed, since we have to be up at 4:30 to milk the cows.

My German family, it turned out, consisted of the father, short and rotund, in his mid 60s, who owned the farm and helped out, but had stepped aside to allow his son, Friedrich to run things on a day-to-day basis. This seemed unusual, but it later became clear that the parents had the final say on things. The mother and her daughter ran the kitchen and did the housework. There was a frail grandfather, “Opa,” who didn’t come out much.

The son, Friedrich, who would be my boss, looked to be in his early thirties. He had a fiancee in town. Friedrich was very Saxon looking. He was about 5’11”, with straw blond hair, and was of strong build, with broad back and veins showing on his almost Popeye-like muscled lower arms. He had a rather square face, lively blue gray eyes, and was handsome and Nordic looking, and spoke in clipped sentences. Like most Germans, he was confident, serious, and very bright.

The family also had a hired hand of long standing, Ernst, who had a bedroom upstairs above the barn. Ernst was about Friedrich’s age, but looked a bit worn and blue collar. He was tall and thin and blond also, but kept mostly to himself. Ernst was a hard worker and strong, and he, Friedrich, and the father all worked well together. There was no socializing among them after work. Talking to Ernst after work, I learned that he was a communist

I got along very well the family and tried hard. Friedrich was protective of me, not letting me do dangerous duties, which were many. He complimented me one day for the way I literally ran everywhere, from errand to errand, as they did. He joked with affection “you are a good worker, but bad farmer, “du bist a guter arbeiter, aber schlecter bauer.”  I made a lot of mistakes, not knowing the difference between piles of hay and straw, and once running the tractor wheels over the stalks, instead of between the crops, ruining a strip of vegetables that had been planted. Friedrich was a bit strained that day, but didn’t make an issue of it.

I was gradually improving my language skills and becoming accustomed to hard labor. I enjoyed the feeling of farm work, of being out in the fields close to nature and weather, riding the tractor all alone, or taking care of the pigs, or grooming the show horses. I got used to getting up at 4:30 to milk the cows, then working the fields, and falling asleep at lunch for a nap like the others. I especially liked the mid-morning coffee break, or “coffee trinken,” in the fields, with the mother and daughter bringing out cold black coffee and fatty sausage sandwiches on dark rye bread. I enjoyed the dinners with boiled potatoes, thinly sliced prosciutto, and strudel for desert. I even enjoyed herding the bulls along the road from pasture to pasture, driving them with a stick. Neighboring farmers on tractors, in their German Feldsher uniform hats from the war, would see me in my surplus American khaki shirt, and we would wave at each other on the roads. The war was over, even though it was only twenty-two years behind.

The only problem was Friedrich’s father, who didn’t seem to particularly like me.  I learned from Friedrich that the father had been in an American POW camp at the end of the war, which could explain it, since the war between the Americans and Germans in Europe had been bitter. But, why would he hire an American? Maybe Friedrich, rather than the parents, made the decision, based on the fact that he was now running the farm and had to make a profit. He provided room and board, and wages of 160 marks per month, or forty dollars, for which he got an additional hand.

The family never discussed politics. They seemed very traditional and insular, and didn’t seem to interested in what was going on in Bonn and elsewhere. Friedrich seemed more open and liberal than the parents.

“Friedrich, I asked one day while we were working, “what was it like here during the war?”

Friedrich said he had been young and couldn’t remember much, but he could recall that “you could see the fires of Hamburg at night after the terrible British bombing raids.” It was nice, I thought, for him to single out the British for me. “And,” Friedrich said, “the children from the big cities were evacuated to the countryside.” Perhaps, I suddenly realized, I had over-estimated Friedrich’s age.  It sounded like he had been a small child then.  Maybe he was now in his mid twenties, but looked and acted older. His serious manner suggested that Germans grew up faster, like my father’s generation in the U.S.

“I heard that in this part of Germany, even the youth of twelve to fourteen years had gone to the woods and put up a fierce armed resistance to the British Army as it moved in,” I said to Friedrich,  having heard this from two British soldiers stationed in Verden.

“Not so,” Friedrich said. “It was youth brigades, military units, and not so young, maybe sixteen. They didn’t fight in the forests like partisans, but with regular army units in the cities and wherever.” I loved the last word, “irgendwo.” Something about the way Friedrich answered, however, averting his eyes, made me unsure of his answer.

“The people here,” Friedrich added, “were mainly exempt from the war because they were farmers and were needed to provide food.”

“Was your father treated badly as a POW?”

Friedrich thought carefully a second, realizing this was not an innocent question, but was potentially related to my relationship with his father. “No, treatment was normal,” Friedrich  said thoughtfully, selecting his words carefully. “He was only a prisoner at the end, when the war was practically over.” He used the word “vorbei,” or “past.”

“Naturally, there was disappointment over the losing,” he added after a pause, “and some unhappiness over the bombing. But, all that is past, and people no longer feel anger.” Friedrich said something general about war, or “krieg,” grimaced, and made a gesture with his hand like brushing it away. Friedrich seemed to be what was called the “good German,” part of of the younger generation with different attitudes. The older Germans of his parents generation, were often unrepentant so far as I could tell. They had no interest in me.

The family and I generally avoided discussing the war. Once, however, Friedrich, Ernst, and a neighbor’s son started talking with me about World War II songs as we were fixing a gate together. I initiated this, jokingly, starting with “don’t sit under the apple tree, with anyone else but me…” and “this is the army Mr. Jones, no private rooms and telephones…” The German songs, I quickly discovered, despite their laughing about them, were a bit more malicious, “an American, little American, lands in the army and gets a ‘springer-bomber’ that he brings over with him. Let him come, let him fall, let him be destroyed with all the others…..”  I could, for the first time, envision the anger of a German fighter pilot relentlessly firing at a B-17.

Ernst also sang these war songs, which was interesting, since he was still a communist, from the GDR, and theoretically should have had a distaste for German fascism. He, too, sang the songs, a bit too enthusiastically. Ernst returned home to the “East Zone,” near Leipzig, once a year during his vacation from the farm. I asked how he got home to his family, through the border, and he wouldn’t say, just that there were ways, places, to get in. To me, it was strange that the family would hire a communist as farm hand. Ernst just indicated that “they were all Germans.”

After a while, I started noticing “reunification” signs along the highways near Verden, Soltau, Celle, Viselsholde, and Luneburg, and other small towns on the Luneburg Heide, displaying a map of Germany divided into occupation zones by color.  The signs said “five parts, never!”

Living abroad for the first time, I had lots of new experiences, more in one day than I would have in the U.S. in a whole summer. It was an awakening. I would bicycle into Verden on Saturday mornings to go to the British forces “Toc-H” library, looking at magazines and books, then walk around the town, bicycling back in the evenings, occasionally dodging cars coming from behind with the blinkers on, riding into the ditch. These were, nonetheless, idyllic rides in the evening and night. There was nothing to fear except the cars, and the ride was peaceful, under the bright moon and amid the forests, smelling the humid smell of the grass and woods and fields. I would talk to the cows and horses along the fence as I passed. I was on the great northern European plain, and it was beautiful.

On weekends, Friedrich and his father took me to local shooting festivals, or “schutzenfest.” The Germans wore green felt jackets with their shooting medals displayed on the lapels. Or, we went to Luneburg, to horse shows. I joined the “landjugend,” or local 4-H club for farm kids, going to parties at their houses on weekends, plus trips to the North Sea and Harz mountains. Looking down from the Harz, I could see two villages on either side of a double strip of fence and watch towers, the border between East and West as it stretched across Germany, going over the hills north and out of sight. I could see people on the far side working fields and vehicles moving in the towns and people walking normally the streets. It was like looking at ant colonies in another world.

In early July, another American college student, another “gastarbeiter,” named Gene, arrived to work on the farm next to mine.  When we could get away on Sundays, we took trains to Hanover and Bremen, walking the streets all day, and returning late. These cities were much like Frankfurt, but Hamburg, on the other hand, was more Baltic and different. The nights were darker and colder, it had a northern feeling, even in the summer. The city was elegant, and seemed somehow English. There were sailing regattas, and finely dressed people sitting in sharp cafes and living in elegant Hansa homes, which looked Tudor, with manicured lawns reaching to the Alster. One felt separate from the rest of Germany which was far to the south. There were ships going to eastern Baltic ports.

Where I really wanted to be, however, was London. That’s where Ellen was, living for the summer.  We had gone to different colleges after high school, where she had met someone else and we had broken up.  I wanted her back, and sent her a postcard from the farm, which I dropped off in Verden, hoping to get a response. I thought about going to London, even if only to see her on the street, even if she didn’t see me.  I told myself that I just needed to see her again. The crossing point to England, Bremerhaven on the North Sea, was not far away.

One day on the farm, I noticed a letter with Ellen’s handwriting sitting on the mantel, and the mother said “you have a letter from England.” They knew it was from a girl from the handwriting . But, we never opened mail until after we had completed dinner, so I had to wait. After dinner I took the card to my room. Ellen said she was transferring to university in England, and the tone was casual and suggested friendship, giving her phone and address. There was no encouragement. I tried to put her out of my mind.

On the farm, relations with Friedrich’s father had gradually gone from bad to worse. He was increasingly put out that I had no farm experience, and valued being a good farmer more than being a good worker. He would shake his head at my mistakes and walk away, while Friedrich would take me around the shoulder and show me the right way. The father knew high German of course, but still refused, unlike Friedrich, to use it. By August, the father had developed the habit of making jokes at my expense.  One night at the “gasthouse,” the father got drunk and started pointing to me across the room, making loud derogatory jokes to his friends, who were also laughing. He called me to the table to say something rude that I didn’t understand. I objected to the father’s behavior, bringing the split into the open.  The father got furious that his employee talked back, and Friedrich interceded on the my side, and took me over to his table, apologizing for his father.

My standing with the family had begun to deteriorate. I imagined they resented my association with Gene, and our trips together on weekends, when I could have been doing extra work around the farm. Seeing the end of summer approaching, I was also interested in seeing a bit more of Germany in the few remaining weekends I had available, rather than chipping in around the farm on Saturday.

Things came to an end in early August, the first week of harvest, when the father and I got into a spat in the barn over the issue whether i could leave his employment a couple of weeks early, in late August, to see Europe.  The father was naturally angered that I would even consider leaving early, before harvest was complete, and stomped his feet, calling me a “short shit,” or “kurzscheisse,” even though I towered over him. The father even used clear, high German. I was probably looking for an excuse to leave, tired of working for practically nothing, and wanting to see more of Europe before my flight home.  I quit right there, packed, and took off with my suitcase down the road to the gasthouse where I called a taxi. In the driveway before I left, things had calmed down a bit, and I said goodbye to the family, including the mother and daughter. The father stayed in the house. Friedrich had sided with his father, but he and I had a cordial farewell.

I went on to tour Western Europe, with backpack and sleeping bag, hitchhiking, riding trains, and sleeping at the sides of roads and in doorways like the multitude of other American students in Europe that summer. I started by going back to Hamburg, where I stayed in the youth hostel near the Rapperbahn, rising to the sound of a loudspeaker saying “aufsteigen,” and helping with the kitchen work. From there I took a train to Berlin, then hitchhiked back to Munich through the East German corridor, which was technically illegal. I took the train to Innusbruck and on to Switzerland, where I spent my twentieth birthday rowing on Lake Zurich.  I somehow made it to Florence, staying in the youth hostel, which was a large villa, and then hitchhiked through Mount Blanc into France and into the Low Countries, and arriving back in Cologne, staying with German students, feeling back home. My German had improved a lot during three weeks of travel, and I was reading german authors, albeit slowly with English-German dictionary in hand.

In my travels, I seemed to be gravitating towards Germans, which showed that the farm experience had not hurt my love of Germany. Maybe it had something to do with Friedrich’s decency and the fact that my grandmother was of German descent.  Maybe it was the German culture and rich intellectual history that I admired. I particularly liked the German girls, but never seemed to get anywhere with them.

While traveling and talking to German students at the University of Cologne and other young Germans on the road, I discovered some interesting facts about my small part of Germany. I learned that the area of forests and marshes between the Weser and Elbe rivers, including the Luneburg Heide where my farm was located, was the site of the fiercest battles between the Roman legions and “barbarian” Germanic tribes, and the one area where the tribes couldn’t be conquered. I also learned that, during the Middle Ages, the area where I worked had also been the headquarters of the longstanding Saxon revolt against the Frankish Kingdom. Charlemagne had finally ended the revolt, killing four thousand captured Saxon insurgents over four days, beheading over one thousand per day on the trunk of their sacred tree in their sacred grove, near Verden.

On a visit to the Dachau concentration camp outside Munich, I was in for a bigger surprise, seeing a map of the Holocaust which showed the Bergen- Belsen concentration camp was located near the farm where I had lived, near Soltau. I was surprised on learning that I had been working near Belsen and no one on the farm had said a thing.

It was time to return to the U.S.

On my way out of Europe that summer, I had ticketed the “through train” from Hamburg to Frankfurt.  I had gone to Hamburg, planning to make a side trip to nearby Bremerhaven, where I could catch the ferry to England, but had turned around and returned to Hamburg instead.

At the Hamburg rail station, waiting for my train to Frankfurt and home, I picked up a copy of “Die Zeit” newspaper. Settling into my compartment on the train, I asked the porter passing in the hallway for a sandwich and dark beer. As the train headed south, I put down my paper, and looked out at Verden and the surrounding countryside as we passed by. I regretted the fact that I had not stayed on the farm through harvest.  But, my mind was on Ellen.

Upcountry Liberia, 1986

Richard and I had been upcountry. It was African summer with high cumulus clouds billowing up in the thin blue sky. We were on the long road home to Monrovia, hoping for one of those afternoon showers that start accumulating this time of year. The road was a two lane asphalt highway stretching down rolling hills leading towards the coast. I had to politely caution our driver to avoid passing cars on blind hills. That had been the demise of a number of Foreign Service officers.

“David Joe,” I said in my African falsetto, emphasizing each word, “I hope you are not trying to kill me.” Joking got him to slow down; a less diplomatic approach could have led to a sullen trip home. Richard chimed in, “Randy is not a Bassa man,” knowing the Kpelle ethnic group, including David Joe, disliked the rival Bassa tribe. David Joe gave a big grin. We were all pals, and had been on this trip.

We were soon entering the flat central plain, with mangrove swamps and Acacia trees stretching on each side of the highway. As we drove, we went through occasional patches of forest interrupted by farms of broad-leafed cassava trees, and occasional palms. Then, lower, we were passing swamps and flooded lowland rice farms. In the middle of the paddies would stand a bamboo shack, out there alone, sticking up on a small square platform just above the water. Heat waves rose over the paddies, blurring your vision.

The intense sunlight highlighted the smallest details. People in villages which we passed sat in the shade of trees or in doorways, in the shadows. The villages usually consisted of a small number of cement block houses with corrugated tin roofs and openings left for windows, and an occasional cooking fire in the front yard. There might be a goat tied to a stake somewhere on the cleared, hard-packed dirt surfaces surrounding the huts, and children were always present, running in the heat and playing tag. The men sat together on chairs carved from tree trunks. The women were working, pounding cassava, bunched together on logs or mud brick steps.

In the distance, to the north, from which we had come, was a chain of mountains stretching all along the Liberian border, from Ivory Coast to Guinea. We passed a lot of people walking on the shoulder of the road, and swerved around a couple of small Toyota trucks, “money buses,” used as shuttles between cities, the passengers crowded in the back on top of one another, men, women, and infants. This was the usual public transportation in Liberia. Sometimes there was a tarp or hard roof over the passengers, covered with suitcases secured by ropes.

Embassy officers were encouraged to travel up country, and Richard and I had just completed a two-day field trip to assess conditions in the north. We were on our way back to Monrovia, having come from Nimba County, the home of the Liberian-American Mining Corporation, or LAMCO, run by the Swedes who took over the mines after the market for iron ore fell and the Americans sold out. We were hearing rumors that the Swedes were also planning to pull out, and wanted to check these out. We visited local markets to check prices and availability of foodstuffs, spoke with local gas stations to see if fuel was available, and met with mayors and tribal chiefs. All of this would go into the standard trip report.

Richard and I were a good team, known around the embassy as the Blues Brothers, irreverent, giving out nicknames, squeezing humor into cables, wearing baseball caps at work— for Richard, it was Boston; for me, the White Sox. It was typical of us to load golf clubs on top of the van for trips.

i was drifting off in the back seat of the embassy Land Cruiser, watching the serene countryside between Saniquelle and Ganta.

“Excuse me, my friend,” Richard said, mimicking the native English accent, “but I do not believe you ever got out of the van during the trip. David Joe can say this is correct.”

Richard elaborated each word in the deep, officious, self important voice of an African “big man.” He loved to razz me, questioning my claim to be the expert on the countryside.

“You are one to talk, my friend,” I replied in kind, “you, my friend, have never been off the cold tar road.” I always accused him of never visiting the countryside on dirt roads, or leaving the cocktail circuit of Monrovia for that matter. David Joe giggled, knowing this was true. Richard just shook his head in disgust that David Joe was siding with me.

Suddenly, David Joe blared the horn at a group of people walking on the edge of the highway, a bit too close to the road. They gave some room as we whizzed by, but looked unconcerned. We had tried to tell David not to be aggressive behind the wheel, but to no avail. Richard and I just looked at each other. “WAWA,” Richard mouthed to me, for “West Africa Wins Again,” the well-known lament of Africa hands.

“I say, my friend,” I asked Richard, “why don’t we stop for dinner in Kakata at the Stalactite Cafe. You could have some jollof rice, something you have never tasted before.”

“Do not diss me my friend,” Richard replied, “I am a Big Man and you are a Small Boy. I am more used to jollof rice than you are. Besides, I am getting us home in record speed.” I could see that David Joe was disappointed, thinking of the Stalactite’s curry chicken. I shrugged at David.

For some reason, Richard had gotten it into his head to make it back to Monrovia by dinner. It seemed to be a challenge he had made for himself, even knowing the difficulty we would face on the way, getting through Ganta Hospital in any reasonable time. The stop there would require all kinds of formal ceremonies and toasts and would be next to impossible to leave. I had learned over time not to fight it, but to just relax and forget about the clock, and ride it out until they released you. So what, if we got back after dark. But, I also knew there was no use in trying to talk Richard out of his desire to set a new speed record.

As David drove towards Ganta, Richard and I were discussing our golf game at the LAMCO course the day before. He had beaten me by three strokes, but was good enough not to mention it. He said we didn’t really keep serious score.

“I will tell you my man, that was a Mam-ba. Liberian man knows,” I said with my native accent.

Richard grunted. I was referring to the fourth hole, where I had almost stepped over a Black Mamba. Richard had teed off, and was walking on ahead to where he had driven, about 200 yards over a small creek down the middle of the fairway. I had sliced my drive and was following him about twenty yards behind. He crossed the plank over the creek, and walked straight ahead up the fairway, towards the green, carrying his golf bag over his shoulder and stepping out. He was saying something, without looking back, about a “good seven iron shot coming up for each of us.” I had already pulled my iron out of the bag, and was carrying it in my right hand, my golf bag slung over my left shoulder. I let the club swing freely at my side.

I approached the narrow plank over the creek, and was about a step onto it, when a green lizard came shooting up from the creek bed, raced over the plank in front of me, its legs a whiz, and flew back down into the creek on the other side. Then I froze. It was followed immediately by a black Mamba, which shot up behind the lizard, its head right on its lizard’s tail, sliding over the plank and back down into the stream in pursuit, its oval head followed by the thin body, perhaps six to eight feet long. I had never imagined such speed in a snake was possible, and I knew it saw me with his large round eyes as he raced by. Thankfully, the Mamba was not interested in me, but I knew they were extremely aggressive towards humans and could strike even in passing. I knew it was a Mamba by its olive drab color and its narrow shape compared to a cobra.

I yelled to Richard that I just stepped over a Mamba. He quickly turned around and looked to see if I was serious, cautiously walking back towards me, studying the grass. After I described what had happened, he gave me that cynical look of his, and said “take your blood pressure pills, LeCocq.” He turned back and resumed play.

Afterward, I had thought about what could have happened, and the fact that we were quite a ways from the club house, let alone the LAMCO clinic. Could we have made it within twenty minutes? That’s how long I would have had according to Richard, “assuming it wasn’t a bull snake.” Would they have had the anti-venom? David Joe, speculated “no have.” My detailed description of the Mamba and mainly its speed, I could see, had convinced David Joe that it was a Mamba, but he teased me, saying, “Boss man Richard says ‘no see…, no confirmation’.” He laughed that African giddy laugh when they are tickled, like a young boy’s laugh. I grabbed him to tickle him, and he giggled with delight, gripping the wheel. The Africans are so personable and love it when you are personal with them.

Richard knew that I didn’t like snakes. He felt I exaggerated their presence.

David Joe pointed ahead to the JFK hospital as we pulled into Ganta, the district capital. It was about 2:00 p.m. and we were at the half way point home. We pulled off to the left across the highway into the parking lot. Once inside, we encountered the strong smell of iodine. The hallways were crowded with people sitting on benches waiting for appointments or for treatment, often wearing hospital gowns, but more often dressed in village attire. The wards were crowded, with family members camped out around their relatives’ beds. There were beds in the halls.

The Liberian head doctor gave us a walking tour, noting the increasingly difficult conditions due to the lack of medicine and x-ray equipment. Most of the patients were either women giving birth in the pediatric ward or individuals recovering from malaria. In one ward, we saw a male patient who was extremely thin, even beyond the malaria symptoms. I asked the administrator what was his illness, and he answered that he was recovering from “pneumonia.” The administrator told us out of earshot that he feared the man would be “carried away,” not make it.

I caught a knowing glance from Richard, who whispered to me as we continued our walking tour, “maybe the Embassy doctor can pay a visit.” We knew AIDS was appearing all over Africa, and could be present in Liberia. After putting together a list of needed medicines to pass to the embassy doctor, we said goodbye to the hospital staff, knowing this would be the hard part. They were, as always, very gracious.

On the way through the parking lot, another doctor came up quickly, accompanied by a large, heavy set Liberian police officer in dark green uniform with stars on the epaulets. “Could we help the police chief by giving him a lift to Kakata, since his police cruiser was indisposed?” We had a policy of not taking riders, but I said “of course, it would be an honor.” Richard looked at me like I had just ruined his speed trial.

Our driver went around and opened the door for the police General, who, before he got in, embraced one of the nurses in the parking lot, whispering to her seriously in a Liberian dialect. He gave her a long hug around the waist, and she handed him a small basket. She was about forty years his junior, perhaps eighteen years old, and very pretty, with very dark, smooth, beautiful skin. When we got in, I said the nurse was very pretty and smiled, and he raised his hand in a high five salute, and gave a guttural “eeh” sound, a “boys will be boys” gesture, and we all laughed, and off we went.

“I want to thank you for your generous hospitality in affording me the ride. Unfortunately, my driver had a breakdown on the road,” he said.

“You are the Police Chief of the entire district?,” I asked.

“Yes, but unfortunately, I have too few men on my staff.” He asked if I knew Mr. William in the Embassy, his best friend. “Yes,” I said. William was William St. Claire, the Embassy security officer, who liaised with local law enforcement organs. St. Clair’s job was the protection of the Embassy and its staff.

“Mr. William is a g-o-o-d man,” the Chief stressed the adjective. “He is providing us police cars from Baltimore.” He acted as if he knew Baltimore. The Liberian police received used vehicles from our police departments as they upgraded. But, the police were helpful, stepping in, curbing the excesses of the military.

A few miles down the highway, about half way from Ganta to Kakata, he asked if we could pull over for just one minute at a roadside stand, to pass a message to the lady who runs it. David Joe pulled over, not needing to ask me. The General got out, and walked to what was a small one room shack standing just back from the road. The shack, made of boards and a thatched roof, had a counter in the doorway lined with Fantas, candy bars, and cigarettes facing the highway. A curtain separated the counter from the room behind it. The General greeted the market woman, who looked middle aged, but could have been only around twenty five, wearing a scarf wrapped around her head. He put his arm around her shoulder and walked her behind the curtain. David Joe looked at us and grinned.

“Country wife?,” Richard asked.

“Maybe yes,” David Joe laughed, “Maybe many.”

After a few minutes, the General came back out through the curtain carrying a cake box and introducing us to the market lady. There was a slight lipstick smudge on the corner of his mouth, which she wiped off as she wiped the sweat from his head, smiling a bit embarrassedly but proudly. He also gave her one of his long hugs as he said goodbye to her. Her eyes were all on him. As we pulled away, they were still holding hands through the car window.

He said something to David Joe in Liberian and they both laughed. When I said he certainly knew a lot of beautiful women, he said with a laugh “a man is a lion.” We all laughed again, and again did the high five to the “eeh” noise. Probably Richard was right, that they were both country “wives,” girlfriends that his wife tolerated.

The General was telling us about crime in his area when we came to the Kakata turnoff to Bong Mines, a German concession about ten miles down the road. He asked if we could perhaps drop him at the mines, but Richard answered that unfortunately we had to be back to the embassy by 5:00. It was 3:00 now and we had about a ninety minute drive. Richard had the driver pull over in Kakata, on the highway to Monrovia. David Joe went around and opened the General’s door and Richard helped him with his package. The General shrugged, and said he was grateful for the ride and we all shook hands. He made Richard do the African handshake twice since Richard missed the snapping of index fingers together at the end of the shake. They laughed at this, and we drove off, the General standing on the side of the road, looking bewildered.

“Richard,” I laughed, “you are a ba-a-a- d-d man.”

“This is one they will talk about for years at the Embassy,” he said, “from Saniquelle to Monrovia in six hours, stopping at the hospital en route, and dumping a General, no lunches, no palaver, just bam, bam, bam.” Richard was relishing the accomplishment.

“Good job,” I added, “I only hope we never get detained by some army sergeant in Kakata and have to call the police for help. I was reminding him of an earlier incident in Kakata, where a drunk, bloodshot sergeant at a checkpoint had pointed his M-16 at us and yelled at us to stop, while another sergeant was angrily yelling at us excitedly to move on, also pointing an M-16 at us. That had been an interesting night, but not unusual in Liberia.

We were interrupted in our ritual by a road sign saying “Old Kakata Road.”

“David Joe,” Richard said, “is it true that Old Kakata Road is dangerous due to magic?”

“Yes, boss man,” David Joe said guardedly.“The road is under the control of the Devil at night,” he added after a pause.

I had once seen the “Devil” David Joe was afraid of, walking on stilts down the side of the road in broad daylight, wearing a red costume and mask, and with a costumed entourage. It was deadly for a Liberian to see him. They were to avert their eyes, and villages closed all the windows when the “Devil” was walking in the area. I had been to one ceremony where the devil was “dancing” in a ring surrounded by onlookers. We were told not to take photographs with flashes since it could disturb the dancer, who was in a trance, and this could cause him to fall. Devil dancers who fell during the ceremony had occasionally been put to death, we were told.

As we were driving, David Joe noticed a Peace Corps volunteer hitchhiking up ahead near the market place with  her hand out at the roadside. We pulled over. We knew the volunteer, a very pretty blond named Jennifer, who was teaching English in a village school near Kakata. She was petite and energetic, and very dedicated to doing good in the world, and she had graduated from Swarthmore. Unfortunately, she had already paired up with a male Volunteer while in training, which was typical. He was near Monrovia, and she came to the capital often to see him.

She was wearing a simple tie dye dress, like the Liberians, and had a large canvas bag hanging over her shoulder. We noticed that she had some kind of an animal in the bag, because its head was sticking out amid some towels. Jennifer had a baby bottle of milk in her right hand, and was accompanied by a Liberian girl, about fifteen, who was from her village. I was envious of the Peace Corps and their friendships with Africans, who seemed to revere them. The Liberian girl was just dropping Jennifer off, not going with us. They hugged and kissed on the cheeks as Jennifer got in.

Jennifer explained that she was taking a duiker, a small antelope which had been abandoned by its mother, to the makeshift zoo at Robertsfield airport outside Monrovia, and hoped it was okay that she bring the deer along. I said sure. Richard, knowing I could not say ‘no’ to an attractive woman, gave a cynical smile and mouthed “a man is a lion.” He knew that the makeshift zoo was controversial and that I was not too keen on it.

The embassy had a contract mechanic named Pete something, a real swinger, who maintained planes at the airport.  He had created his own private zoo of his own outside the hangar in his spare time, receiving orphaned animals from Liberian friends. He had constructed some wire cages and pens, and had collected a few goats, some gazelle, antelope, guinea fowl, and chickens, plus a pot bellied pig. The problem was that he was reportedly selling some of the animals to U.S. zoos on the side, including, we heard, a gazelle to the St. Louis Zoo. Richard knew I had little use for Pete and his weekend parties at the hangar. He had an apartment there and was usually living there with one of the British Air or Swiss Air flight attendants. He had once made a play for my girl friend, Tess, who was visiting me from the U.S.. She told me about it to make me jealous, and it did.

Jennifer climbed into the back seat, and took the baby antelope out of the basket, and laid it on her lap. It was a newborn, about the size of a small dog, and had a beautiful tawny coat, tall big ears, and a black shiny nose. She put a baby bottle full of milk in its mouth, and it started drinking.

The deer was shivering out of fear, and I leaned over and stroked it on the forehead with my finger. It kept drinking, lying on its back in Jennifer’s lap now without the blanket and looking up with rather opaque black eyes at her. Its breathing was still fast and you could see its small sides moving in and out with each breath. After a short while, its breathing eased a bit. Jennifer asked if I wanted to hold it, and handed it over to me with the bottle still in its mouth. It lay on my lap and drank, with those attentive black eyes looking up at me. We passed a turn off.

“I envy your life, Jennifer,” Richard interjected from the front seat. “We were just in Voinjama, where there was no electricity whatsoever. Walking in town at night, there were no lights, no moon, no flashlights. Just a mass of invisible people walking the streets. We kept bumping into people in the dark, people in front of us, or coming our way in the opposite direction.”

”They have better night vision than us,” Jennifer said.

“You’ll have to excuse Richard, he has never been outside Monrovia,“ I said.

“My friend,” Richard said with his Liberian accent, “I must warn you that you are dealing with a dangerous man.”

“I am more dangerous,” I said, parroting an exchange we once heard between two Liberians on a Monrovia street, “Because, I am also an irresponsible man.” We laughed. Jennifer was getting into her canvas bag for another small bottle of milk for the deer.

The baby deer’s eyes opened as the bottle emptied. I had some milk on my hands and put my index finger into the deer’s mouth. The deer sucked on it, but didn’t have any teeth. I took back my finger and let it stand upright, held against my chest. I petted it gently with my free hand.

“Do you want me to take her?,” Jennifer asked.

“I like holding her, if it’s okay. I love animals.” I was thinking of my calico cat, ‘Cracker Jacks,’ who I had to leave behind with my son and ex-wife when I came to Liberia.”

“He really calmed down with you.”

We drove for another half hour, then to the east of Monrovia, entering Robertsfield airport.  As we pulled up to the hangar, Pete, the mechanic-zoo keeper, came out and walked us over to the pens.

“That duiker really likes you,” he said to me.

He went inside the hangar and came back with a bowl and some oatmeal. He took Jennifer with him to show her his place. When they came back, I heard him say she could come back anytime to see the duiker. Jennifer said she would like that. When he suggested she stay behind for dinner and he could drive her back, she said she had to get back to Monrovia.

“Take it easy, LeCocq,” Richard said to me quietly, “you don’t want to anger the guy who maintains planes we fly on.”

I casually asked Pete if he was going to sell the duiker, and he said no, he just fed them and wasn’t sure who would take them over, probably his replacement mechanic. He opened an empty pen. I offered the deer to Jennifer to put inside, but she indicated I could do it. I leaned down to put the deer inside, giving him a kiss on the head, and stroking him a few times on the side before I lifted him in. He was standing up.

We dropped Jennifer off at a nearby village called “Smell, No Taste,” the town where her boyfriend worked, consisting of about a thousand inhabitants with a central market place, cement block school, and a number of shack houses. I greatly admired the volunteers, seeing Jennifer walking away though the crowd in the market, blending in with her tie dye dress and canvas bag. Richard commented that he would hate to be her current Peace Corps boyfriend, with “Travolta,” his name for the mechanic, nearby.

I left Monrovia that fall, and settled in back in Washington.  Richard was in Europe.  I had forgotten about Monrovia, and the trips upcountry were a hazy memory.

A couple of years later, I was working on the Mozambique Desk, and dating Sheri, in the Department’s Human Rights Bureau, who would become my wife. One Sunday, we took our godson with us to the National Zoo, stopping to see our favorites, the zebras, cheetahs, great apes, pandas, and elephants. I always avoided the reptile house. We particularly liked the baby rhino and the African female elephant who constantly lifted her left foreleg out and put it back down, as if doing a one-footed dance. This, we thought, was the result of an earlier life with a circus. We walked over to the bear exhibit, seeing Elsie, the kodiak, and her next door neighbor, the silly sloth bear with the clown face, who obviously had a crush on Elsie, who paid him no mind despite his attention getting antics.

We decided to make a last stop, the afternoon feeding of the seals. On the way, we passed the large fenced-in area for the deer species, a gradual slope with Thompson gazelles, antelopes, and Bongos. We stopped on the sidewalk and looked out over the deer area. The zoo was crowded that day, and a lot of people, were standing next to the fence at the bottom of the slope, looking up, some calling futilely at the elusive Bongos.

Sheri and I stopped by the fence to rest, and I looked out at a nearby group of duikers, some standing or lying on the grass, others eating shrubs. After a minute, one of the standing duikers, a fully grown but still smallish antelope, turned its neck around and looked at us, and slowly swung its body around, away from the antelope group, as if on a hinge. It stood there, looking our way, about forty yards away, then started slowly walking down the hill towards us. A few onlookers came over towards our area along the fence to get a closer look since the antelope usually kept their distance. The duiker seemed focused on me. It stopped about ten feet on the other side of the fence, opposite me, looking directly into my eyes. The other duikers remained up the hill. People were trying to get this one’s attention.

“I think you have a way with animals,” Sheri said, but my mind was beginning to recognize those opaque but attentive eyes. One of the young boys who had climbed up the wire fence to get a better look, turned and looked back at me to see what I was doing to get the duiker’s attention. I could see his eyes wondering.

“Do you want to go to the seals?,” Sheri asked. Our godson was pulling on her arm.

“In a minute.” I was still looking at those dark eyes.

The duiker’s eyes slowly lost their focus. There almost seemed to be a sadness with the way it turned and walked slowly back up the hill. We turned to go to the seals, but my mind was still on the duiker.

“You know that animal?” a man passing on the sidewalk asked, joking.

I shrugged and smiled back without saying anything, and we went on to the seals. I looked back over my shoulder, but the duiker was huddled with the others.

Richard would have said “no confirmation.” But, I knew.

Childhood

Our Oldsmobile has side vents.
Which block the wind when the windows are down.
Or point the air in when you need it.
We follow cars with purple tail lights way ahead.
One car has a broken light that is white.
Our steering wheel is ivory.
The gear shift has a glass knob you can see though.
I sit in front in the middle and sometimes get to shift.
Our Olds is two-toned, white and turquoise.
It has a silver hood ornament, a jet with swept wings.
All the cars on our block are streamlined.
I know all the cars. Dad tests me as we drive.
Pontiacs have four chrome stripes running down the hood
Buicks are round and have holes punched into the side
Mercurys are low and have a toothy grill.
Our Olds Super can outrun the Wilson’s car.
We circle the drive in to get hamburgers and shakes.
A Vespa scooter and Studebaker are in front of us.
They are talking to each other. The Vespa wobbles to stay up.
Dad likes root beer floats at the “A and W” best of all.
Mom likes Dairy Queen hot fudge sundaes.
Some days, we make popcorn and go to the drive-in theater
We park on a bump looking up at the screen. Dad pulls the speakers in.
Kris gets to turn the round button.
It is sunset. The stars are coming out before it is dark.
We kids play on swings under the screen until the cars honk for us.
The “Vista Vision” logo is on the screen. John Wayne’s name appears.
We are just in time.
We have to be quiet. Mom and Dad sit together in front.
We fall asleep during the movie and wake as we pull into our drive
We are carried into the house to bed.

Calling for Katya

Driving in first gear with windows down. Calling out. It is 35 degrees, going to 29.

Looking with high beams for illuminated eyes, a glimpse of white fur under a parked car.

“Kate,” you call repeatedly, but not too loud. You’ve already walked around the block.

“Katya,” “Kate Ann,” … “Kate.”

Of course, she’s okay, you say, just “galvanting” out there, hopefully.

A black cat in a front yard runs around to the back of its house.

Do you go left or right? The cul de sac? Let intuition decide.

Which way would she normally go? You expand the net, working back.

Hopefully, she wouldn’t try to cross busy Osuna Avenue.

You head back: If’ she’s not there, you’ll try walking again, or expanding the grid.

You walk in the house. Sheri says quickly, “Katya’s home.”