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June 8, 1970
Wiley waved to me from across
the ramp as I stepped off the C-130 shuttle plane from Bangkok.
I lifted my hand in response, then raised it to my brow, shading
my eyes against the Thai sun, merciless still at mid-afternoon.
The hop from Bangkok was the final leg in my journey to Nakhon
Phanom Air Base, where I was to begin my assignment with the
606th Special Operations Squadron, flying C-123 cargo missions
around Thailand. Wiley’s presence heartened me. I’d heard that
most guys who arrived in Vietnam were unceremoniously dumped on
the ramp in Saigon or Danang and left to find their own way to
their units.
Welcome to the war, buddy, such
a callous reception announced.
Maybe my war would be
different.
Wiley leaned against a blue Air Force pickup truck
parked before a large billboard that shouted:
FLIGHTLINE PHOTOGRAPHY
STRICTLY PROHIBITED
VIOLATORS PUNISHABLE
UNDER UCMJ
All I could think was, why would anybody care if I snapped a few
pictures of cargo transports to send back home to Sharon?
Other
than that puzzling note, my arrival at NKP was wholly different
from what I’d heard of most Vietnam receptions. I felt I was
being welcomed to some country club. Wiley ambled toward me
wearing a big smile. “Hi, I’m Wiley. Welcome to the Candlesticks
and NKP. I’m your sponsor. Let me help you with those bags,” he
boomed cheerfully. Relaxed smile. Happy eyes. An easy-going way
about him. Definite mid-western accent. Maybe Rockford or Madison. Huge, calloused farmer’s hands. Probably grew up
playing high school football and driving his grandfather’s
tractor during the summers.
Wiley looked much older than me, but
I figured we must actually be about the same age. After all,
every pilot assigned to the Candlestick squadron is probably in
his early twenties like me. But Wiley seemed years older.
I
wondered if something about this place had caused him to age
more quickly, but I forced a smile to make a good first
impression. “Hi, I’m John Halliday. Thanks for coming to meet
me.”
“C’mon, let’s get you out of here and into someplace cool.
Nobody here wears that flightsuit during the day. It’s too damn
hot.”
He was right. My flightsuit was about to melt into my skin.
The northeastern Thailand heat was a blast furnace. A real
inferno. I took a breath, but the heat singed my nostrils. I
shifted to mouth breathing, but the heat boiled down my
windpipe.
Wiley helped me with my bags and then dropped them
into the back of the six-pack. I tried to open the passenger
door, but pulled back when the handle scorched my hand. “Use
your sleeve,” he suggested. We jumped in the air-conditioned
truck and drove down the flightline. Impressive. My own driver.
I thought I was go to like this place better than Vietnam.
“How
hot is it?” I complained as we passed rows of parked
planes.
“It’s one hundred and eight, with the humidity a
pleasant ninety-five percent. We run from air-conditioned spot
to air-conditioned spot,” Wiley explained as he did a series of
double takes at me, staring far too long and then looking away
when I noticed him sizing me up.
“I thought you guys called this
place Naked Fanny,” I said, an attempt to break the ice that
failed.
“We hate that,” he scolded. “Bob Hope pinned that on
us when he came for Christmas last year. The name is Nakhon
Phanom, but we call it NKP.”
I thought, so much for my
good-first-impression idea.
There! He did it again . . . the
long look . . . checking me out.
As we drove down the flightline, the scene seemed caught in a
1940s time warp. The Maguire Sisters should have been singing in
the background about the “Boogie Woogie Bugle Boy from Company
B.” There wasn’t a modern jet aircraft in sight. The ramp was
littered with propeller-driven aviation relics that belonged in
someone’s garage sale, not out here fighting a war. I could see
A-1s, A-26s, C-123s, OV-10s and Jolly Green Giant helicopters.
Hand-me-down, cast-off airplanes no one else wanted. I figured
the Air Force sent them way out here under the title “special
operations” to make people feel good having to fly these old
rattletraps.
I realized I’d landed in aviation’s backwater.
I
noticed the ramp we were driving across---no, the sensation was
more like riding a boat over small waves---wasn’t even concrete.
Instead, it was corrugated-metal sheeting, in which dead star
thistle weeds poked up through six-inch-round holes. Even the
ramp was a cast-off nobody wanted. I thought, ought to be
slicker than owlshit taxiing on it when it rains.
Wiley pointed
to a building. The sign over the door proclaimed:
606th SPECIAL
OPERATIONS SQUADRON
Wiley said proudly, “That’s us.” Beside the front door hung a
six-foot oval wood sign, emblazed with a winged candle burning
bright above a black, mountainous background. The abbreviation
“606 SOS” wreathed across the logo’s top. “Our squadron patch,”
Wiley explained, handing me a stiff, new Candlestick patch.
I
ripped my existing “Military Airlift Command” patch off its
Velcro strips and replaced it with the golden-winged
candlestick.
Wiley smiled, patted me on the back, and said, “Welcome to
the Candlesticks. Now you’re official.”
Since I knew squadron names and patches attempt to capture a
unit’s mission, this name and patch seemed inconsistent with
transporting boxes. I made a mental note to ask Wiley about it
later.
As we made a right turn off the flightline headed toward the
officers’ quarters, I said, “I noticed the razor-sharp security
fence all around the base as we flew in and the guard towers
manned with automatic weapons. I thought these Thai bases were
secure.”
“Well,
the place is pretty safe,” he chuckled. “There’ve been a
few local skirmishes. But if you’re a runner, I wouldn’t
recommend jogging along the perimeter fence.”
“Oh,
thanks,” I answered weakly.
That too long look came again. I knew what was coming. He
asked, “Say, did anybody ever tell you that you look like a
young version of Pat Boone, the boyish-looking crooner? You
know, ‘Love Letters in the Sand’ . . . the white shoes . . . the
clean-cut image . . . all that crap?”
“Yes,” I groaned. “All the time. I had to live with
that sappy image all the way through high school and college.
I’d rather not start that here if you don’t mind.”
Wiley was perfect. “Sure. No problem, John.”
As we drove down the block, I noticed the place seemed
deserted. Where was everybody? The base should have been hopping
with activity. Strange. An eerie feeling came over me. I should
have asked Wiley what the big deal was, but kept my mouth shut.
No sense asking more dumb questions, confirming my
ignorance.
After three blocks of driving past rows of shed-type
buildings typical of Thai bases, Wiley parked. I picked up my
gear and we walked across a wide grass front lawn to the
quarters I’d been assigned.
Grass? The dead brown grass blades crunched under
my boots like broken glass. “The rainy season doesn’t start till
November,” Wiley explained.
I saw maids along the long front porch, cleaning rooms as if
the place was a resort. This assignment is going to be okay, I
reassured myself. My unease over what to expect from NKP and the
fatigue from the long flight both began to fade.
I asked Wiley how much the maid service cost, because I
didn’t have a lot of money to spare and I would rather clean up
after myself to save the fee. But he said not to worry . . . the
Air Force paid the maids as part of the deal with the Thai
government in Bangkok for letting us fly out of their country.
A man our age resembling Robert Redford was sitting on the
porch drinking a beer under the mercilessly hot sun. Waves of
sweat sheeted down his face. Why was he outside in this blast
furnace?
Wiley introduced me. “Mark, this is your new roommate, John Halliday.”
I offered a handshake, but Mark did not look up from what he
was doing. I could see by his blank, distant expression he was
off in some private world all his own. He had the plastic rings
from a six-pack of something in his hands and was
s-l-o-w-l-y pulling them apart. Mark took each ring and
carefully stretched it until it was about to break. Just before
the plastic failed, he held it up within a fraction of an inch
of his eyes to focus on something I didn’t understand.
“Nice to meet you, Mark. How are you doing?” I asked.
“Ninety-six down and two hundred and sixty-nine to go,” he
mumbled slowly.
I didn’t understand. “What are you doing there?” I tried
again.
“Watching . . . the . . . bubbles.” Mark stumbled over each
word.
I tried again. “What?”
“Watching the bubbles. Just before the plastic breaks, a
whole bunch of little bubbles form. I stretch them out to see
how big and long I can make them before the plastic fails. It’s
really neat to watch the bubbles pop.” He did it again. Snap!
Mark smiled.
“Where’d you get all those plastic . . . holes, Mark?” I
didn’t know what to call those . . . things. They don’t have a
name. Back home, they’re trash, but they seemed important to
Mark.
“Drank it,” he said proudly. “I drank it.”
I stared at him, then climbed the rest of the wooden steps
and walked into the room.
The room was a dungeon. Gray, chipped paint peeled from the
walls. One light bulb hanging from an ugly ceiling fixture cast
a harsh light in the windowless room. Filthy gray linoleum
floors. No wonder Mark was out in the hot sun.
An old 1950s window air-conditioner, about to jump out of its
crudely cut hole in the front wall, was trying unsuccessfully to
beat back the wall of heat. I was getting a sinking feeling.
“The open-bay shower and johns are in the middle of the
building about seven doors down,” Wiley pointed down the porch
to continue the tour. “The Thai maids will walk in on you in the
middle of a shower, put their hand over a smile, and giggle
while they pretend to be on their way to clean out a
toilet. But, don’t worry . . . you’ll get used to it. It’s
harmless sport for them.”
More sinking feeling. So much for any shred of privacy
Mark’s bed was closest to the door. He had crudely taped a
large monthly calendar on the wall beside his bed. My new
roommate had scratched big, black X marks through all the
previous days. He had scrawled large red numbers inside each
remaining block to tally the number of days left before he
returned to the States. Yesterday’s number was 269. That meant
Mark had been here only three months and his afternoons’
entertainment was exploding plastic bubbles . . . Great.
That’s not going to happen to me, I promised myself. I’m
stronger than that. I am not going to change.
My bed was at the back of the dungeon. One beat-up, small
metal desk completed the décor, except for a military-gray,
portable metal closet whose doors I tried to open, only to
discover them jammed shut. More sinking feeling. The place was a
sewer. This could be a long year.
There was no chest of drawers for my stuff, so I threw my
gear on my bed. Bad idea. The thin mattress sagged like a
hammock clear down to the dusty floor. An explosion of fine dust
flew up in my face. I coughed and rubbed my eyes. “Red Thai
dust,” Wiley explained. “You can’t get rid of it . . . it’s
everywhere.”
Any self-respecting homeless shelter would have thrown out
the disgusting excuse for a mattress. I told Wiley, “Let’s get
out of here as soon as I can get out of this hot flightsuit.
This place is depressing.” I changed into the standard Southeast
Asia off-duty outfit of shorts, T-shirt, and tennies. No socks.
Then I asked Wiley, “Where’s the club? I could use a cold beer.”
We turned and went back outside into the blast furnace.
Crazy Mark was still breaking bubbles, and in a neat pile
beside him stood a stack of the same plastic rings. He’d been
drinking a lot of something. It looked like he was going
to make an afternoon’s entertainment of his sport. As Wiley
walked me toward the officers’ club, I hollered back at Mark,
“See you later.”
Mark did not look up, but he shouted as we walked away,
“Don’t look at everything in the BX the first day! Only look at
one corner of a shelf to start. Save something for a month from
now.” I couldn’t imagine what he meant.
“And can labels . . . read labels! The vegetable soup can is
the best,” Mark hollered.
“Okay, Mark, I will. See you later,” I yelled back.
Mark needs to see a shrink fast, I thought. His contact with
reality was slipping away. But that wasn’t going to happen to me
. . . I’m stronger than that, I again reassured myself.
“Is he always like that?” I asked Wiley.
Wiley looked confused. “Like what?”
“Well . . . you know . . . sort of . . . disconnected.”
“Oh, that’s just Mark. He’s one of our best captains.”
“You mean you let him fly in command like that?” I asked
incredulously.
Wiley shrugged and answered matter-of-factly, “Oh, sure. He’d
fly every night if we let him. We have to force him to take his CTO every month. If I remember right, he’s leaving on a CTO
tomorrow morning, so you’ll have the place to yourself for a few
days to get settled in.”
“What’s a CTO?”
“Oh, sorry, it’s ‘combat time off.’ We get four days a month
in Bangkok, and before you go thinking that’s a good deal, don’t
worry; you’ll earn it.”
Earn it? Earn it? I thought to myself, what the hell
have I gotten into? When they changed my assignment to NKP from
Vietnam at the last minute, all they told me was this was an
easy mission, hauling cargo around Thailand. A piece-of-cake
assignment. I was thrilled at my good fortune.
Still confused, I asked, “What’s the deal with the
soup labels?”
“Actually, that’s good advice,” Wiley explained. “There isn’t
much to do around here, and reading canned-foods ingredients is
good entertainment. I prefer the chili can myself . . . you’ll
see. And a trip to the BX trailer is something you’ll have to
plan and execute carefully, too. And Mark’s right . . . don’t
look at everything the first day. Take one small corner of one
shelf and really spend time looking at what’s there.”
We stepped off the curb and crossed the empty street.
“Force yourself not to look at the things on the shelf below
or above or around the corner, or you’ll be sorry later. You
should probably have an experienced person go with you to stop
you from looking at everything the first few times before you
get the hang of it, or you won’t have anything to look forward
to. If you want, I’ll take you the first time.”
I stared at him, bewildered. Was he kidding?
“Don’t worry . . . you’ll see soon enough,” he finished.
Out of the corner of my eye I caught Wiley shaking his head
at my ignorance. He had that wry Vincent Price smile that seemed
to say, “You’ll be the next one. You can’t stop it. Don’t even
try.”
Stop what? No, I won’t see. I won’t be next.
You’re wrong. I’m stronger than that, I promised myself.
The day I started reading labels would never come.
I thought we were
going to the officers’ club for a beer, but Wiley said, “Say, you want to stop by my trailer for a cold one? I’ve got
a refrigerator and you can see the quarters you can move up to
in about five months.”
Five months? The sinking feeling grew. Five months locked in
that dungeon with crazy Mark? “Sure, thanks,” I answered, trying
to fight off a wave of depression.
Maybe I can find a way out of here before they get used to
having me around, I thought to myself. I had heard of pilots
talking their way into a different assignment right at the last
minute. Maybe they needed some C-123 pilots over in Vietnam. I
would keep quiet about my idea, go over to personnel the next
morning, and see if I could get reassigned. I would be gone
before they knew it. Good plan. I wouldn’t even unpack my stuff.
Knowing I would soon be away from NKP lifted my spirits and I
began feeling better.
We climbed up tipsy concrete steps to Wiley’s trailer. He
opened the door, went inside and I was hit by a blast of polar
air. Wonderful!
“Hurry up, come in and close the damned door,” he yelled. I
jumped inside, slammed the door and looked around . . . stunned.
Wiley’s trailer-half had the same space I would be sharing
with Crazy Mark. He opened a door and proudly showed off his
semi-private bath. I looked around in awe. Built-in closets.
Fake wood paneling on the walls and a chest of drawers. Brass
coach-light fixtures brightened the place so he could read.
Blackout curtains covered the one small window--- evidently for
daytime naps. Air-conditioning from an exterior compressor.
Wall-to-wall carpeting. A refrigerator! Two mattresses stacked
on the twin bed for true comfort.
The place was a palace.
The room was stuffed floor to ceiling with every imaginable
piece of state-of-the-art 1970 stereo equipment. It looked more
like a sound studio than a place someone lived. Wiley had the
newest equipment: a Sansui 5000 amplifier, an AKAI crossfield
head reel-to-reel tape deck, the top-of-the-line Garrard English
turntable and four Pioneer CS99 speakers with fifteen-inch
woofers. There was enough power to throb brooms marching out of
the closet.
The stuff must have cost a fortune. I figured he must be
rich.
Wiley opened the small Sanyo refrigerator stuffed with San
Miguel beer and handed one to me. Then he jumped up and sat on
his two mattresses, so trampoline-tight they didn’t sink an
inch. While mine sagged like a hammock? I looked around the
cramped room and saw no chair, so I leaned back uncomfortably
against the door.
Wiley noticed my discomfort and sprang off his
trampoline-bed. “Sorry . . . you’ll have to excuse my lack of
manners. I’m not used to having guests over yet. I only moved in
a couple days ago.” Then he reached between a built-in closet
and the wall and produced a garishly painted red folding chair
from its niche. “Ain’t she a beauty?” he said proudly. “I
rescued her rummaging around the base junk pile, sanded her
down, got a can of candy-apple red spray paint, and suddenly . .
. I’ve got furniture. I can have company over!”
He unfolded the chair and said, “Here you go. Have a seat.”
Wiley pointed to the fridge and told me, “Help yourself to
another cold one when you finish that one,” and hopped back up
on his trampoline mattress I eyed with envy.
“How come your mattress is so firm and mine sags to the
floor?” I asked.
“Plywood,” he answered seriously. “Three-quarter-inch
All-American plywood.”
I asked where I could get a sheet for myself.
“I’m not sure . . . it’s in short supply. You have to
know somebody, or scrounge around for yourself to find a
piece.” I must have looked worried because he quickly added,
“But I may know somebody who’s leaving back for the States in a
couple days. Maybe I can talk him out of his plywood for you . .
. unless he’s already promised it to someone else.”
I smiled, thanked him, and sat down gingerly on his red
relic. Then I waited for my sponsor to guide the rest of the
conversation. After a few gulps of beer he finally asked, “So,
how’d you get here?”
“Well, after jungle school in the Philippines, they put me on
a C-141 to Bangkok . . . ” I stopped when I saw Wiley start
chuckling.
“No, no, no . . . I mean how’d you wind up in the military as
a pilot in the first place?”
“Sorry . . . guess I’m nervous,” I laughed uneasily with him.
“I’d graduated from the University of Miami in Florida and was
in graduate school in Washington, D.C., when I got a letter from
my draft board saying my educational deferment had been
cancelled. They gave me thirty days from receipt to join some
other service, or it looked like I’d be headed for Vietnam rice
paddies with an M-16 in my hands.”
Wiley smiled and nodded as if he’d heard the story before.
“That same day a headline in the Washington Post
described that the Air Force was short of pilots. So I ripped
out the headline, went down to the recruiter’s office, took a
flight physical, and raised my hand. After that, I spent a year
in pilot training, got married, spent eighteen months in
California at Travis flying a big cargo plane in and out of
Southeast Asia, and then got orders to Phan Rang over in
Vietnam.
“You look awful young for this. Just how old are you?”
“Twenty-four,” I said apologetically. “But I turn twenty-five
next month,” I rushed to add, realizing our talk was turning
into a job interview.
“So how long you been out of pilot training?” he asked
suspiciously.
“Two years,” I answered proudly.
Wiley looked disappointed. “Ever been an aircraft commander
before?”
“Nope.” Wiley shook his head in disappointment. I hurried to
explain so he wouldn’t think me a weak pilot my old outfit
bypassed for command. “My last unit wouldn’t let lieutenants
upgrade to AC. They mostly had us inventorying safety equipment,
counting crew meals, and figuring takeoff data. Most of the ACs
were old-fart majors and colonels old enough to be our fathers
who wouldn’t let us fly much.”
Wiley seemed shocked. “You mean you’ve never been in
charge of an airplane and crew before?”
“Nope . . . sorry,” I answered sheepishly.
“Oh, jeeeez! We keep asking personnel to send us pilots with
command experience and guys like you keep showing up.”
I apologized again, but defended myself, explaining there was
nothing I could have done.
Wiley let me off the hook. “It’s all right. We’ll make it
work somehow.”
I changed the subject. “So tell me what routes we fly. Are
they scheduled cargo runs around the Thai bases, or random
stuff?”
“Nobody told you?”
“Nobody’s told me squat. I don’t have a clue what goes on
here. After jungle school I thought I was headed for Phan Rang,
but at the last second got orders here. I got on a C-141 headed
to Bangkok, spent last night at the military hotel, and here I
am.”
“That’s the way it happened for all of us,” Wiley said
conspiratorially. “Nobody knows they’re coming here until
the last second. And our mission is more complicated than
hauling cargo.” He chuckled to himself.
I stumbled ahead. “So exactly what is it you guys do? Nobody
could answer my questions.”
“They’re not supposed to be able to,” he explained.
“Nobody’s supposed to know this place even exists.”
“Oh” was all I could manage.
“To be assigned here, you had to pass a security check above
top secret.”
I jumped in, “Gee, I didn’t know there was anything above top
secret.”
“Everything here is top secret or above, and later
tonight I’ll show you one of the reasons why. But as to what we
do, it’s one of my jobs as your sponsor to warn you right off
the bat what can happen to you if you tell anyone---I mean
anyone---what we do here.”
I didn’t know how to respond, but began feeling frightened.
He offered, “You can tell your wife . . . what’s her name?”
“Sharon.”
“Well, you can tell Sharon where you are, but you are not
permitted to tell her what you’re doing and especially not
where we fly. You can’t tell her in phone calls, letters,
tapes, nor when you see her for R and R in Hawaii and you’re
strolling along some moonlit beach. Not even when you’re back
home a year from now . . . not until this war is long since
over. If ‘they’ find out you’ve violated these rules, you can be
expected to be prosecuted and punished to the maximum extent
possible under the Uniform Code of Military Justice. Do I make
myself clear?”
I thought he must be pulling my chain. “You’ve got to be
kidding, Wiley. What could be going on at this godforsaken place
anybody could possibly care that much about?”
He looked insulted and his face turned dark. “I’m dead
serious. As far as anyone back home knows, this place doesn’t
exist. You can expect your letters to be opened and sampled at
random, your phone calls to be monitored, and any voice tapes
you sent to Sharon to be opened, checked for divulging secrets,
and be undetectably resealed.”
“But what happens if I make an honest mistake and blurt
something out?”
“Same thing. This is serious shit we’re talking about, John.
Oh, I almost forgot . . . you are especially not to talk
about our mission at the O club in front of the Thai waitresses.
That’s an easy place to slip up and get caught. Let me tell you
a story.”
I nodded and grabbed another beer, deciding to humor him.
“Sometime after last Christmas ‘they’ opened up one of those
family Christmas letters from this guy’s parents in which his
folks had published exactly what we do . . . blow by blow. He
was in deep shit.”
“So what’s the big deal about writing about hauling cargo
around Thailand? And what could they do worse than sending him
here? What happened?”
“Nobody knows. In the middle of the day while we were all
sleeping, his trailer-mate heard some commotion coming from this
guy’s side, but rolled over and went back to sleep thinking the
guy was just rearranging furniture.”
“So what happened?”
“His trailer-mate found the guy’s room stripped bare that
evening. Everything was gone . . . his bed, dresser, stereo, all
his tapes, photos of his girlfriend . . . his cans of food and
beer . . . the place had been completely sanitized.”
I began feeling frightened. “So what happened to him, Wiley?
People can’t just disappear.”
“Well, he did. Nobody knows what happened to him. He
was never seen again. But the point is . . . make sure you keep
your mouth shut.”
I reached for another beer. “How come all the secrecy about
hauling cargo around Thailand?”
“I can’t tell you here. We’ll have to wait till we get to a
secure area.”
“When will that be?”
“Tomorrow night,” Wiley looked around and whispered, “When we
get behind the secure walls up at TUOC---the Tactical Unit
Operations Center.”
“Tomorrow night?! I won’t be able to sleep tonight the way
you’ve built this up.”
Wiley shook his head. “I can’t say any more than that. I
could get in lots of trouble.”
“What? Please . . . surely you can tell me
something.”
Wiley thought hard for a while. Then he said, “Okay, I’ll
give you the basics . . . but remember . . . you didn’t hear it
from me.”
I told him I promised and crossed my heart. Gawd, what a jerk
I was.
Wiley scooted forward on his trampoline and lowered his voice
to a whisper. “We have two missions. The first is a simple
night-flare-dropping mission, but it’s only twenty per cent of
what we do these days. Dropping flares was the first job the
C-123s had up here, and it’s why our call sign became
Candlestick. What we do is fly above friendly forces across the
boarder in Laos and drop air-burning flares suspended under
parachutes. The light they give can be the difference between
the good guys on the ground living through the night or being
overrun by overwhelming numbers of bad guys.”
I was surprised to learn we would be flying over Laos.
Despite all the secret briefings I’d had the past two years, I
didn’t know the U.S. was involved in Laos. But not wanting to
appear any more naïve than I already had, I answered, “Sounds
simple enough. I could do that.”
“I’m sure you could.”
“So what’s the main mission?” I asked.
“Killing trucks at night out on the Ho Chi Minh Trail.”
“WHAT!” I exploded. “How the hell can you possibly do
that? The C-123 is just an old cargo plane.”
He chuckled. “That’s what everybody thinks and we want
it to stay that way. But anyway, we cruise up and down the trail
looking for supply trucks to destroy that TFA has already
spotted for us.”
“What a minute. What’s TFA?”
“Task Force Alpha . . . that’s one of the reasons I didn’t
want to start this discussion in a nonsecure location, but I’ll
come back to TFA later.”
“Okay,” I answered, slid forward on his red chair and gulped
my San Miguel.
“So when we spot a truck convoy, we drop three ground-burning
markers off to one side of the road into the heavy jungle to
mark the convoy’s position. The jungle is so thick, the drivers
can’t see them burning. Then we’ll set up a left-hand orbit over
the target, call in some fighter aircraft, and give them bombing
directions in reference to our ground marks. Then we sit back
and watch the fighters blow the crap out of everything. It
sounds simple, but it’s effective.”
I was stunned. “Oh, my god, Wiley. I had no idea this was a
combat mission. The bad guys can’t be too happy you’re trying to
blow them up. Do they shoot back?”
“Oh, absolutely,” he answered matter-of-factly. “Every night.
Sometimes we’ll spend the whole night dodging shells. Some
nights the whole sky is alive with red tracers coming up at us .
. . it’s a blast. You’re gonna love it.”
I shook my head. “Jesuzz, Wiley . . . I don’t think so. I
don’t know if I’ll be able to do that. But how in the world do
you find trucks in the dark?”
“You gotta see this thing to believe it,” he explained.
“We’ve got this new top secret thing called a starlight scope
that magnifies available moonlight something like a thousand
times. It looks like your average backyard telescope. Each plane
has one on board. Our ‘scope navigator’ uses it to look down
through a hatch in the belly of the plane to spot truck
headlights.”
“There must be a long check-out program. A couple months, I
suppose?” I was trying to digest all this.
“Well, we’ll go out on the trail tomorrow night. We have a
ten P.M. briefing. You’re gonna be my copilot. I’ll show you
what it’s like, but there’s no formal training program. You’re
on the schedule a week from tomorrow night to fly in command.”
He slugged down more beer.
I felt nauseous. “Wiley, you gotta be shitting me. I can’t be
ready that fast.”
“You don’t have much choice,” he explained. “We’re way short
of pilots, so you’ll be flying that mission in command next week
ready or not.”
“What else is there?” I asked dejectedly.
“You’d better force yourself to stay up all night tonight so
you can sleep during the day tomorrow. Then tomorrow night we’ll
take off just before midnight and fly for about five hours. To
help get your body clock reset, sometime around midnight tonight
I’ll take you over to Task Force Alpha and get you the tour.
You’ll have to have above a top secret clearance to get in,
but---”
“Wiley, top secret’s all I’ve got.”
“If you’re here, you already have it. You just don’t
know it yet. They wouldn’t have let you come here without a deep
background check, though that takes months.”
I let his news settle in while I gulped some beer. Finally I
asked, “So how do you know where to look for trucks? Even with
this fancy starlight scope, Laos is a big country.”
“That’s the best part,” he answered enthusiastically.
“Remember those huge electronic boards from the movie Dr.
Strangelove that showed all those Russian bombers headed for
the U.S. and ours headed at them?”
“Sure,” I answered.
“Well, Task Force Alpha is a lot like that except with
real-time displays in full color three stories tall . . . it’s
the whole goddamned Ho Chi Minh Trail in full living color.”
“Wow, Wiley. So where is this TFA?”
“Maybe three hundred yards over off the north end of the
base; it’s carved right out of the jungle. I’ll escort you over
with my security badge until you get your own. We’ll have to go
through three sets of barbed wire, with whirring surveillance
cameras and electronic gates we’ll have to be buzzed through.
Then we’ll come upon this dark, monolithic building hiding in
the jungle . . . the damned thing’s huge.”
I sat and listened, stunned.
“Step out of the jungle and inside the building, you step
back into America---but an America fifteen years from now . . .
maybe 1984. It’s beautiful. . . gleaming tile floors . . . glass
walls everywhere. They have a full cafeteria where you can get
anything you want. They even have real milk, not that powdered
crap we get at the messhall. And air- conditioning? The whole
damned place is air-conditioned. There’s even a bowling alley
and a movie theatre . . . and a whole bunch of civilians who
look like IBM guys running around in three-piece suits all
wearing glasses . . . it’s ‘Geek Central.’ We never see them
over on our part of the base, so I guess they have everything
they need in there.”
He went on. “Then there’s this main control room that looks
like the one we saw on TV during the Apollo moon shots, or maybe
something out of a James Bond movie. There’s computer
terminals everywhere. But the main feature is this huge,
three-story-tall Lucite . . . or maybe it’s plastic, I don’t
know. . . full-color depiction of the whole Ho Chi Minh Trail
with a real-time depiction of trucks coming down the trail. It’s
wild, man.”
I felt dazzled. “How the hell can they pull that off?”
“Well, we’ve got these RF-4s they call wild weasels . . . I
think . . . this is all on rumor . . . but I think they fly down
the trail at a couple hundred feet at six hundred knots,
dropping a series of electronic eavesdropping sensors alongside
the road. You’ll see one of the sensors tonight over at TFA.
They’re designed to bury themselves in the dirt while leaving
their camouflaged antenna sticking out above ground level . . .
looking like just another jungle plant.”
“That’s brilliant. But how does that information get to those
Lucite boards?”
“Easy. The sensors are battery-powered and are set to pick up
noise or ground vibrations of trucks driving by. They send those
signals up to one of our own NKP planes called a mini-bat that
relays the signals over to the Lucite screens at TFA.”
“So what you’re seeing is a live depiction of truck
convoys coming down the trail?”
“Exactly.”
“So when you fly out looking for trucks, you know where they
are?”
“Sort of . . . they don’t have the whole trail covered and
the sensors break down a lot and some get blown up; but it helps
to know where to begin to look. Pretty cool, huh?”
“Wiley, I had no idea our country had this kind of
technology. Sharon and I just bought a basic four-function,
hand-held calculator for a hundred bucks and thought that was
high-tech. This level of technology never got into the news back
home.”
“It’s not supposed to. The whole point is, you can sit back
and watch all the sensors automatically fire off along the whole
trail and see where the trucks are running any given night.
Tonight we’ll ask one of the geeks to point this handheld
red-light gun they have to activate one of the sensors and we’ll
listen in. Sometimes you can hear the drivers bullshitting when
they stop for dinner. If we’re lucky, we might hear an airstrike. You can listen in on the fighter pilots’ frequency
and hear the explosions. It’s a front-row, armchair-quarterback
seat on the whole air war.”
I was getting pumped up. “Incredible,” I told him.
“The worst part of the TFA visit is coming back out to this
part of the base. You step back in time forty years. It’s
depressing.”
His story over, a silence grew between us. I looked around
the room for something lighter to talk about. It was hard to
miss his tall stacks of reel-to-reel audiotapes. Finally I said,
“What are all these tapes? Where’d you get all of them? They
must have cost a fortune. I couldn’t afford all this stuff.”
He shook his head. “I’m not rich . . . just single. The tapes
are cheap and you’ll need them because the only music they play
on Armed Forces WNKP is our fathers’ music. You know, Lawrence
Welk, Mitch Miller, Andy Williams . . . that kind of crap . . .
nothing any good. I got most of the tapes from Cheapskate
Charlie up in Hong Kong. He makes pirated knockoff tapes of
record albums you can’t find here and sells them for a buck a
tape . . . four tapes for three dollars. He’ll make a special
tape of anything you want.”
“Isn’t that illegal?” I asked.
“Hey!” Wiley answered sharply. “Music is the only thing that
keeps us going . . . that and beer. Besides . . . we’re on the
other side of the planet getting our asses shot off every night
at a place no one knows or gives a shit about. So who’s gonna
say anything?”
I stared at the mountain of equipment and tapes. “All I’ve
got is a small clock radio, so I guess I’m stuck with Andy
Williams.”
“Well, you can come over any time you want and listen to some
good stuff. I know what it’s like to be in that hellhole with
Crazy Mark. I was his roommate until two days ago.”
I suddenly realized where he got his plywood . . . my
bed.
Then he bounced off his trampoline and said, “Let me show you
my new sound system. I just finished dubbing this tape.” He
threw on a series of power switches along a whole wall of
electronic equipment and the trailer began to hum like an
electrical substation. The lights in Cleveland must have dimmed
at the power draw as Marmalade whispered softly:
The changing . . . of sunlight . . . to moonlight
Reflections of my life
Ohhh, how they fill my eyes
The greetings . . . of people . . . in trouble
Reflections of my life
Ohhh, how they fill my mind
Wiley closed his eyes and mouthed the chorus with the band:
All my sorrows, sad tomorrows
Take me . . . back . . . to my own home
All my cryings; all my cryings
Feel I’m dying, dying
Take me back . . . to my own home . . .
Soon he grabbed a mike, threw the “on” switch and started
belting out a karaoke routine. He closed his eyes, rocked back
on his heels, leaned back, and howled off-key with the tape.
Over and over and over and over.
All my cryings; all my cryings,
Feel I’m dying, dying . . .
It looked to be a two-hour tape containing nothing but the same
song, “Reflections of My Life.” I thought, what the hell have I
gotten myself into? I had only met two guys and they were both
certifiable . . . Crazy Mark and Weird Wiley.
After howling a while, Wiley shoved a mike into my hand and
said, “C’mon, John, you’ve got to get into this music. Give it a
try.”
“No
thanks,” I said quietly. “Maybe later,” you crazy bastard. He
shrugged it was my loss and whispered the next verse, while I
told myself, this is not going to happen to me.
Not me. I can stay above it all. I’m stronger than
they are. I’m going to stay just the way I am.
Wiley shook his head, rocked back and screamed the chorus
at the top of his lungs.
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