Part 49 (1/2)
At nine o'clock, Ben saw Mr. Dacus pulling up on Eliot Street with a boat and trailer being pulled behind his car. Ben ran down to meet him.
”Let's go look for your daddy, p.i.s.sant. You'll go crazy sitting around here with all these women.”
”You're supposed to be in school, Mr. Dacus,” Ben said.
”So are you, p.i.s.sant. But I'm the boss and I decided to take a day off. Let's. .h.i.t the river.”
They drove to the Old Jones Landing at the end of St. Catherine's Island where they were met by a man with a map and a radio who was organizing the searchers who pushed off from this landing. The landing was clogged with the cars of men who were already on the water looking for Bull Meecham.
”Hey, there, Mr. Dacus,” the man called.
”Vardis. How are you, boy?”
”You looking for the pilot?”
”Sure am. Where you want us to head for?” Mr. Dacus asked.
”Do you know where Ashley Creek is?”
”About seven miles from here, isn't it? Isn't that the one that cuts into St. Catherine's Sound near Garbade's place?”
”That's the one. Check that one out.”
When they were in the river, Mr. Dacus said to Ben, ”That's the best duck hunter in the state. With boys like that in the search, they'll find your daddy.”
They pressed close to the riverbank, avoiding the middle channel for fear they would lose all orientation in the fog. It was not a thick fog, but it had a deceptive quality about it. It was not a fog that one would normally take with any great seriousness but a clear-eyed man could not penetrate it any deeper than fifty yards. In the back of the boat, Mr. Dacus studied a compa.s.s as he guided the boat toward Ashley Creek.
Coming out of a small tributary that emptied into the sound, they spotted Jim Don and Pinkie searching a sh.o.r.eline on foot. Their boat was beached on an indentation in the marsh which provided a natural landing. Pinkie spotted them before they disappeared in the fog and shouted, ”Don't you worry, Ben. We'll find your daddy. Philip and Art are up by Goat Island looking. Even Mr. Loring's in a boat looking.”
”We'll probably have to send a rescue party out looking for Ogden after this, Ben. He doesn't know how to work a pencil sharpener, much less a motor.”
They were two miles into the sound when they heard a helicopter pa.s.s them overhead flying in the direction of the naval hospital.
”You think they might have found Dad, Mr. Dacus?” Ben said, his eyes following the sound.
”I don't know, p.i.s.sant.”
Before they went another mile, they pa.s.sed a boat bearing two men dressed in work clothes. One of the men was Ed Mills. The boats pulled alongside each other, the motors idling.
”Good morning, Dacus.”
”Good morning, Ed,” Mr. Dacus replied.
”Good morning, Ben,” Ed Mills said.
”Good morning, Mr. Mills,” Ben said.
”You become a man this morning, Ben. They found your papa.”
”Yes, sir.”
”He's dead, son.”
Then there was the business of death, the complexity of how to deposit a badly burned corpse into the ground of a National Cemetery as quickly and with as much dignity as possible. Lillian spent a full, enervating day on the telephone notifying a staggering number of relatives on both sides of the family. She spent two hours with the legal officer from the air station straightening her affairs. An endless stream of friends, well-wishers, townsmen, Marines, the regulars at Hobie's, and teachers of her four children came to the house to offer their condolences. There was no time to dwell on the death; there was too much to do and so little time to do it. Lillian was graceful, courageous, and indefatigable. She attributed Bull's death to G.o.d's will, the inexorable will, the unrecallable will and she had no quarrel with that. They had lived together nineteen years and had produced four lovely children. There had been good times and bad times. She hoped he had not suffered in the end. The pilots a.s.sured her he did not. At times, she would break into tears at moments she seemed most in control. There was a dignity to her grief and an acceptance of the fait accompli-the fatalism that the pilot's wife must beget whenever her mate forsakes her for his aircraft. The chaplain kept referring to ”the remains.” Bull Meecham had become remains.
The night before the funeral they brought the body of Bull Meecham home, a reflex from Lillian's early days in rural Alabama when the coffin was always brought home, maybe not opened, but brought home to be with the family one last time. Lillian lined her children by the front door and friends cleared a path as the funeral director and his a.s.sistants bore the casket in through the front door to rest in his house the night before he would be buried.
”I want your father home with us,” Lillian explained to the children. ”That is how it is done in my family. Now I also want to tell y'all something very important and I want you to listen to me very carefully. Tomorrow is going to be very hard on us all, but I want you to remember that the Meecham family will conduct itself honorably at the funeral. We will not cry in public. Bull would not have liked it. He would not have allowed it. He would want us to be strong. He would be proud of our strength and we are going to make him proud tomorrow. Our grief will be a private one. If you wish to cry, cry now. Cry here at the house. Cry with each other or with our friends, but tomorrow at the funeral, there will be no tears. You will remember at all times that you are the children of a fighter pilot. You are the children of Bull Meecham and you will act accordingly. You know how to act. You have been reared to know.”
”Can I sniffle a time or two?” Mary Anne had said.
”Don't you dare start this now, young lady. This is no time for your ugliness,” and Mary Anne had wept in her room for an hour.
At the same time the relatives were coming from Chicago and Georgia, the Marine pilots from around America began to land in Ravenel, began to arrive in transports and jets, and private planes. The airways filled up with men who had heard about the death of Bull Meecham and they were coming to pay homage to one that had fallen. The brotherhood of aviators was coming to bury Bull Meecham. And on the night before his funeral, the Ravenel Officers' Club filled to capacity as old pilots told stories to young pilots of Bull Meecham in the Pacific and Bull Meecham in Korea. They drank to the life of Bull Meecham. They celebrated his estimable gifts as a fighter pilot and in those first days of his death the stories began to enlarge and a mythology was born that had the capacity to grow into something larger and more universal than his life was or could have been. He should have punched out sooner and the h.e.l.l with the civilians some said. But acts of small heroism are admired, not understood in all their vague complexities, but at least admired. They drank to the death of Bull Meecham and they sang. The song started in a far corner of the bar but was quickly picked up and relayed from table to table, from gla.s.s to gla.s.s, from Marine to Marine. By the last four lines of the stanza, most of the Marines were on their feet. Others had mounted the tables and two of them screamed out their song from the top of the bar. It ended not as a song but as an anthem in defiance of death and in praise of the men who wore the wings of gold. It ended as a challenge flung into the face of the rider on the wings who rode with all pilots in all lands. The song was of affirmation and of witness.
”As we stand near the ringing rafters The walls around us are bare.
As we echo our peals of laughter It seems as though the dead are still there.
So stand by your gla.s.ses ready.
Let not tear fill your eye.
Here's to the dead already And Hurrah for the next man to die!”
Lillian kept a solitary vigil beside Bull's coffin, staying the night with him as she prayed the rosary.
At two in the morning, Ben slipped downstairs to sit with his mother awhile. Images of his father danced in the havoc of a brain overstimulated by events. He had no belief in his father's death. He wished to open up the coffin, to smell the burned flesh, to put his hands in the hurt places, to feel the tongue that had once invoked the name of Santini for the world to hear. He came and sat down beside Lillian. For a moment, neither of them spoke.
”How did you meet Dad, Mom?” Ben said, for no other reason than to begin a conversation.
”At a dance.”
”Did you like him right away?” Ben asked.
”Heavens no, sugah. I thought he was a barbarian. He had no idea how to conduct himself at an affair with ladies and gentlemen present. He was pushy and boorish and kept cutting in every time some poor boy wanted to dance with me. Then he would refuse to let the other boys cut in on him. He was a scandal at that first dance, an embarra.s.sment at the second, and was thrown out at the third.”
”Why did you like him, Mama?”
”Because he was a charmer. Because he was persistent. Because he was romantic and sent me flowers every day for two weeks after he met me.”
”He really liked you, huh?”
”Like me! Sugah, at that time in my life I thought any boy who didn't ask me to marry them was both physically and emotionally sick.”
”How many boys asked you to marry them before you said 'yes' to Dad?”
”Eleven or twelve. Maybe more. Most of them went away to the war. Some of them were killed. There was a quarterback from Georgia Tech who was killed that was a charming boy. Of course, back then I thought all quarterbacks from Tech were charming. Some of the boys were just in love with love. Some were just too young.”
”Did you date any Marines besides Dad?”