My Dad was the same way after coming back from Vietnam, I don’t know what happened to him over there but my Mom said a totally different man came back. He was a veteran of World War two and the Korea conflict, hell he was a POW in Korea and it didn’t change him. But something in Vietnam turned him into a man full of anger and a mean streak as wide as any Texas highway. Turned him to drinking and fits of uncontrollable violent rage. Hell I would go to school with both eyes black and a broke nose but nothing would be done about it by any of my teachers, they were afraid of my Dad killing them and their whole genetic line. His reputation led to me being isolated and forced into becoming a loner in school, never getting asked to my anybody’s birthday parties or sleep overs.
Zach has taught me a lot about self defense and using your body to kill people, and in return I have taught his city bred and raised ass the skills I learned from being a lonely country boy. About tracking and how to survive in the woods. During the weekends and sometimes weeks in the summer I would disappear into the woods that surrounded my house as a kid. These woods were a way to escape my home life. My Mom knew I was good at it and would be OK, but she always begged me to be careful. She also knew why I lusted for this escape.
It was my Dad who first introduced me to the pure joy of being alone in the woods. In the fourth grade the scouts came to my school on a recruiting drive, it was the first Friday after school started. When I got home and had confirmed my Father was in a semi sober mood I excitedly laid out the program for him. I explained how I would pick up aluminum cans to pay for it and it would only be about sixty dollars for me to join. Of how it would allow me to become a better person, I so wanted to belong to something, to be somebody. My heart soared when he nodded his head and looked at me and said what I hoped he would,
”I think a boy needs to know how to survive in the wild, it’s a good idea you got there kid.”
I was so amazed when he got up and went into the kitchen where my Mom was, I was excited at the anticipation of him asking my Mom to make out a check for the sixty dollars, I was going to be a boy scout and finally be a part of something. My heart turned to ice when he came back into the living room a few minutes later not carrying a check, but a brown grocery sack. He set it down on the coffee table and proceeded to show me the contents of the sack, an evil grin on his face. Inside it was a P38 military can opener used for C rations, a can of pork and beans, about twenty feet of fishing line, a small knife, a few hooks and a box of matches, that was the total contents of the bag.
“Go get in the car, you want to learn how to survive in the wild, I know just the place for you to figure it out.” Twenty minutes later he stopped just before a set of railroad tracks running next to a creek.
“There are fish and frogs in this creek, they will feed you.” He pointed up the creek. “Keep your matches dry, if you survive I will pick you up Sunday night right here.”
Terror flooded over me, “I’m scared Daddy, I don’t want to do it anymore, please take me back home, there are things out there that can hurt me Daddy, please don’t make me do this.” I pleaded with my father to change his mind.
“If you think things out there can hurt you stay your ass in this car and see what the hell I will do to you, get out now!”
I scramble out of the old sixty two Plymouth we had as fast as I could. My Father pelted me with gravel as he spun off in the car. I sat down and waited for him to come back, preparing myself for another beating. After about an hour I gave up and figured it was time to start taking care of myself. I was scared and hungry the first night. I huddled under the bridge forcing my then tiny body, I was a small child, as deep under the piers of the bridge as I could. Feeling sorry for myself. But the second night I had a fire and wasn’t eating fish but was cooking a small stupid rabbit I had caught, over the fire.
That weekend I fell in love with the woods, I had found a place of escape, a place of solace, a place where I was accepted without question and without ridicule. A place I could firmly feel, grasp and relate to. I was waiting for my Dad beside the road on Sunday night, my Mom came with him, she had a black eye, no doubt because of me, I always felt so guilty. My Mom looked at me and just smiled I had a re-birth that weekend, and I skipped a few of my future birthdays, you know the ones between eight years old and thirty years old, I had grown up fast, a self sufficient young man, Daniel Boone didn’t have shit on me.
I am shaken from a lite slumber by Zach, it’s time for my insertion, Zach is next followed by, Hernandez, Jennings, Briggs and finally Jones. I will have Zach on my left and Jones to my right. Jones and Briggs make me nervous, there is something out of place with them. Briggs seems like he has some experience. But Jones, he seems like the kind of guy who needs to be a “Chair-borne Ranger”.
Zach points at the fast line hanging by the Huey door, “See you in a few days little brother, watch your damn ass.” He smiles as I step out on the chopper’s skid, ruck on my back, my rifle slung over my right shoulder.
I flip him the bird as I slide down the fast rope into the mouth of the dark jungle below me, a sense of dread over runs me for a second, I look down to make sure it’s clear below, looks OK, I must just have the jitters, after all it’s my first mission.
Once on the ground I look up to see Zach’s head peering down at me, a grin from ear to ear as he flips me the bird in response to my salute to him. As the chopper begins ascending into the air, I see Zach’s grin evaporate, my fear tells me it is the last time I will see him or any of my Ranger buddies alive, I think he feels it also.
The jungle noises quieted by the choppers presence begin returning slowly to a loud crescendo after its departure. Its 03:00 and the hunt begins, I hate this place already. I instinctively lift my rifle to my left shoulder and look down the barrel doing a perimeter sweep of the clearing I’m in. First right then back left. I can’t see through the scope the treeline is too damn dark. Hell I can barely make out the trees other than they create a point where the stars end and the darkness begins. I have to wait here until just before sunrise.
Briggs told us the new piece of equipment, the Global Positioning Device, or GPS as him and Jones call it. It won’t be able to link up and give us our plotting course to the villa until it can acquire three satellites to triangulate from. This piece of shit ain’t never gonna catch on, reading a map is just too damn easy. All I know is I would rather of had a map and a lensatic compass, they don’t need any damn thing to “Link up too”, other than each other, your hand, eye and brain. That reminds me I need to get too some better cover so I can get properly dressed with the shit I wasn’t supposed to bring. I chuckle a bit as I head towards the treeline reaching back and patting my butt pack suspended underneath my ruck.
The Mission
As I reach the treeline I walk along it a bit until I find a decent place to ground my gear. I take the Poncho I have wrapped up on my web belt off, unfold it just a bit and sit down on it. I open up my butt pack and start pulling stuff out of it.
My first aid kit is on top, next a Long Range Patrol meal, or LRP. These things are light weight and nutritious but they taste like shit. I always strip them down, keeping only the things I like, I always toss the rest. A pork patty and a peanut butter, I eat both of them washing them down with a couple of drinks from my canteen. The Chicken and rice is a good meal I have one of them also, but the beef