Part 30 (1/2)
Sergeant James joined the other soldiers surrounding the burned-out hull of the helicopter, already so weathered it looked as if it had been there decades. The men crouched over blackened mounds on the ground, unzipped a body bag, put on plastic gloves, and used spades.
Head pounding from a threatening migraine, Helen stood, her purpose gone. Of course, there was nothing there for her, but she had been unable to stay away. Her whole being unmoored, the excuse of going out was her only relief. A death to suffer through with no ceremony, no commemoration of who they had been to each other. A red drop fell on her s.h.i.+rt and then blood began to pour from her nose.
Linh was quickly at her side, pulling out a handkerchief, settling her in the shade of a tree.
”What happened?” she asked.
”Alt.i.tude.
Heat.”
She sat with her head tilted back, the metal taste of blood stripping her throat raw.
”Don't be angry with me.”
Linh was cleaning a lens with cloth. ”For nosebleed? We all miss him.”
”Then why the looks?”
”You have been here long enough but still you act like a child.” Linh remembered Darrow's theatrics over Samang's snakebite death in Angkor. Why couldn't any of them accept fate? Why the long march out here? Of course, he must ask himself the same question. The answer that he feared for her and didn't fear for himself. More and more he believed detachment the only answer to the constant onslaught of loss.
”Just be my friend.”
”I am always your friend.”
Later she walked back and forth along the outside of the site, searching debris scattered a good distance from the crash. Between tall swales of elephant gra.s.s, she found small fragments of 35mm film, the emulsion burned away so that it had a milky, blinded look. Linh recovered a piece of the embroidered neckband that Darrow used for his favorite Leica; it had been wedged under a stone. Although he would have liked to have kept it, he handed it to Helen, and she held it carefully between her fingers, as if it still burned.
Sergeant James came over to her and handed her his canteen. ”Miss?”
”Sorry,” she mumbled. ”Heat.”
”We need to be pus.h.i.+ng off.”
Helen nodded. Her fingers still searched the charcoal ground for slips of film.
”Ready to leave.” He took back his canteen and screwed the cap back on. ”Sorry for your loss. They died like heroes. Trying to rescue two of our own.”
”Khong biet.” I don't know. I don't know.
He crinkled his nose as if from a bad smell. ”How's that?”
”Too many heroes in my life. All gone.”
Her fingers were soot black as she pocketed three small pieces of film. When she wiped the sweat off her forehead, a black smudge trailed behind. The time of extravagant grief over; now she was dry-eyed and quiet. Something had changed, she feared, what ever connection she had felt for the land or the soldiers broken.
Linh came up to her and motioned to her forehead.
During those convalescent days he had nursed her in the Cholon apartment, he had nursed her in the Cholon apartment, Linh had decided the only tribute he could pay Darrow was to send Helen home safely.
She agreed to go only once the body was recovered. When they got news of the crash, Gary insisted that Linh go with him to the apartment. As soon as Helen opened the door and looked into Linh's face, she knew. The worst part how little a surprise it had been, how easy to accept. She pulled Linh inside and closed the door on Gary. But even the fatefulness of the death did nothing to diminish her grief. The sound of her crying tore open his own wounds. An agony to stay with her; an agony to leave.
During those long days, she had asked him about his life, and for the first time he revealed parts. She had earned this trust. He told how his father had been a nationalist, simply wanting in dependence for his country. When Ho embraced the early promise of Communism, he followed. Linh had joined the NVA, believing his father. Soon, they both realized it was a false promise. The family had been willing to lose all, escape. But they found the South, too, corrupted, filled with puppets for the foreigners.
Now Helen untied her bandanna and wetted it from his canteen, wiping the bandanna and wetted it from his canteen, wiping the charcoal from her brow and then spreading the wet cloth open to cover her whole face.
Under torture, men suffocated this way.
”It's time to leave.” He plucked the cloth off her face.
Sergeant James stood at ease with the other soldiers, facing the ravine they had come up, feet spread, arms clasped behind his back like a sentinel. Two improbably small body bags lay at the soldiers' feet.
Far away the hollow thrum of underground explosives could be heard like a heartbeat. Many hilltops over, delicate white puffs of smoke hung in the air.
The Montagnards were supposed to carry the remains out, but they did not show up. James said they were probably still blowing bunkers, so the soldiers decided to carry the bags themselves and not risk getting caught out overnight.
In single file the soldiers walked step by step down the dirt path, the ground loose and red under their boots, each of them shouldering the end of a splintery wood pole, and the unevenness of their strides and the small slips in the crumbling soil caused the bags to sway and squeak. Linh and Helen followed--the ravine plunging, hairpin and overgrown-alternately blinded by the sunlight and then plunged into dark shade as they made their way back down the steep mountain.
Thorn bushes crowding the path snagged at Helen's pants, and once, as she gazed out over the valley, a large thorn dug a long scratch along her arm. Beadlike drops of blood formed along the wound, but she was oblivious to it until Linh came up next to her and rubbed it roughly with a piece of cloth, his eyes glittering.
”You must watch where you're going. Be more careful.”
When they made it back to the LZ it was sunset, and a helicopter was on its way to drop supplies and take them out. Helen ached to go back to the city, to the crooked apartment she had not moved out of, boxes half packed. She waited with her back to the two bags lying by the side of the clearing.
As they waited, four LRRPs, called Lurps, walked in from the bush. They highfived the platoon digging in for the night, nodded thoughtfully to the bags at the edge of the clearing, then squatted under a tree and began to boil rice and dried meat. These types, MacCrae's kind of guys, worked in deep cover, adapting to native ways and language.
Linh went over and joined them. Exhausted, Helen sat on a box of rations. She was surprised when one of the men held out a plastic cup to Linh, and more surprised when he accepted, squatting down to drink with them. By the jerk of Linh's head and the guttural laughter of the soldiers, she guessed it was the local hill tribe moons.h.i.+ne, a fermented alcohol made of rice, lethal stuff.
The helicopter came in, and everyone turned away to s.h.i.+eld their faces. The whole camp pitched in to unload supplies. Two of the Lurps jumped up, jubilant and drunk, and each took one end of the first body bag and swung it up on the floor of the helicopter, where it landed with a hard thud.
”Careful!”
Helen yelled.
The two men stared at her with blank expressions. ”They won't feel a thing anymore, dolly,” one of them said to the howling laughter of his companions.
Helen stared at them and at Linh sitting there, a part of them. ”I'll remember that when I carry your bag.”
The soldier made a motion with his hand as if he had touched something hot.
”Sssssss!”
Helen watched as the next bag was loaded in carefully, almost tenderly.
Linh staggered up to her. ”We're not going out. We're going on patrol with them.”
He nodded his head back to the Lurps eating their dinner.
”You're drunk.” Helen's gaze took in the group of men who were oblivious to their presence. ”Do they know this?”