The Berets

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The Berets Page 23

by W. E. B Griffin


  He had not, for example, demanded that cattle in the village be slaughtered to provide sustenance for his men. He agreed with the mayor that not only were the cattle necessary for the tilling of the rice paddies (which would make their slaughter the same thing as eating the seed rice), but that it would be wasteful. Without refrigeration, or other means of preserving the meat, a substantial portion of it would spoil and do no one any good.

  Song Lee Do had also done as much as could be expected of any man in his position to explain to his villagers the necessity of cooperating with the provisional government. He had told them that when the People’s Liberation Army had completed its task, they would no longer be required to pay taxes to the regime in Saigon. The fruits of their hard labor would no longer be taken from them to enrich the politicians and generals. When Vietnam was free, taxes would be returned to the people in the form of paved roads, so that shipping of their produce to Kontum would be easier; and to provide schools, medical care, and all the other good things that would come to the people once all Vietnam had become Socialist.

  Song Lee Do had repeated to his people what Captain Van Lee Duc had told him: “The root of all of Vietnam’s problems was colonialism. Colonialism put the property of the people in the hands of outsiders, who diverted the fruits of the peasants’ and workers’ labors from the good of the peasants and workers into their own pockets.

  “When the French left, there remained evil people in Saigon, Vietnamese people, who had not seen to it that the workers and peasants got what was theirs, but who had instead simply assumed the roles of colonial, capitalist overseers themselves. They had been corrupted, infected, as animals or a crop sometimes became infected, and it was going to be necessary to remove these infections ruthlessly from the body of Vietnam in the same way it was necessary to sometimes plow under a bad crop, or use acid on an infection on the body of an animal.

  “These corrupt Vietnamese would be killed, and what they had stolen from the people returned to the people.”

  That is what Number Nine Company of the Fifty-third Regiment of the People’s Liberation Army was doing in the vicinity of An Lac Shi. And it was clearly not only the duty of the people of An Lac Shi, but in their own interest, to help Number Nine Company in any way they could.

  Captain Van Lee Duc believed that Song Lee Do understood all this, because he cooperated. Not only were taxes paid when due, but the people of An Lac Shi gave beyond what he had demanded of them. When he came to collect the taxes, for instance, the villagers almost always had a meal for him and his men—and sometimes wine. They were very helpful in other ways, too, like digging tunnels in which rice and other food could be hidden from the eyes of the Saigon regime’s officials.

  And they sent their children running into the jungle to find one of Captain Van Lee Duc’s men to tell him when another shipment for the Agency for International Development was supposed to arrive.

  That truck could be then intercepted by Number Nine Company, the foodstuffs and whatever else they carried instantly converted to the use of the People’s Liberation Army, the truck destroyed, and the soldiers of the Saigon regime’s puppets killed.

  The Saigon regime would then waste a good deal of time, money, and effort sending soldiers in jeeps and trucks and armored cars looking for Captain Van Lee Duc’s soldiers. They would not find them. They would vent their anger at not finding them on the people, and would probably beat up half a dozen young men of the village.

  Young men who had been beaten by soldiers of the Saigon regime often joined the People’s Liberation Army.

  Captain Van Lee Duc would not attack the soldiers sent to look for him. Nor would he attack the column of troops sent to guard the load of foodstuffs that would invariably be sent to replace the loads lost. The People’s Liberation Army would get one-fifth of what was successfully delivered anyway. And if he was too greedy, the Saigon regime would decide that it was too risky to send any supplies at all.

  He would probably send two or three soldiers to take a few shots at the convoy on its way back to Kontum. If that was done properly, a few Saigon soldiers would be killed or wounded, and their mates would waste time and ammunition shooting in all directions, long after his men were safely out of the way.

  There was trouble now in An Lac Shi—not much, nothing that Captain Van Lee Duc could not handle, but trouble that had to be nipped in the bud before it took roots.

  The priest of the Blessed Heart of Jesus Roman Catholic Church, Father Lo Patrick Sho, who had heretofore only concerned himself with the spiritual welfare of his flock, was now starting to interfere in the political affairs of the village. The Saigon regime had come to An Lac Shi three weeks before in three jeeps. One of the jeeps carried an American. The American wore a green beret, and he said that he would be coming back to the village on a regular schedule. The first thing he was going to do, he said, would be to treat the injured and sick. He would also arrange for the very sick to be taken to Kontum to the hospital. There would be no charge for his services, and he didn’t even ask questions about units of the People’s Liberation Army that might be in the area.

  The villagers of An Lac Shi, of course, did not rush to get the free medical services. The first time the American Green Beret came to the village, he just sat there with Mayor Song Lee Do all afternoon, trying to make conversation in French. No villager went near him. Nor did a villager go near him on his second visit, three days later.

  But the third time he came to An Lac Shi, Father Lo Patrick Sho brought a woman with a sick baby to see him. The baby had a very high fever, and the mother was willing to try anything, even an American soldier in a green beret.

  The American gave the baby an injection, and gave the mother some other medicine in little bottles. After the American had gone away, Father Lo Patrick Sho made the mother give her baby the medicine. The baby lost its fever, stopped throwing up, and started suckling. The next time the American came, Father Lo Patrick Sho had two people for him to see, an old man whose jaw was large with a bad tooth, and a young woman who had an infection between her legs.

  Captain Van Lee Duc spoke with Mayor Song Lee Do. He told him that he did not want the villagers to go to the American for help. This was not to the advantage of the People’s Liberation Army, but more important, the pills and injections the American was giving them were really bad drugs, worse even than heroin, which would destroy their minds and make them slaves to the Saigon regime.

  Mayor Song Lee Do did what Captain Van Lee Duc asked him to do, but the priest told the people just the opposite. Father Lo Patrick Sho said that the American was offering them help they could get nowhere else. The injections were not bad. The proof of that was the baby was now well. Consequently he was going to let the American use a room in the Blessed Heart of Jesus R.C. Church and was going to fix it up for him by whitewashing the walls and giving him a desk, a table, and some chairs.

  Captain Van Lee Duc then went to see the priest personally. He didn’t try to tell the priest that the American Green Beret was injecting a bad drug, because the priest was an educated man and knew better. But he told him that the real reason the American was in An Lac Shi was not to help the people, but to gain information about the People’s Liberation Army, so that the Saigon regime could send soldiers and tanks and airplanes. He obviously could not permit that or anything else that would keep the People’s Liberation Army from accomplishing its purpose.

  Father Lo Patrick Sho told him that he knew nothing about politics, and wanted to know nothing about politics. He was the parish priest and it was his duty to get help for his parishioners from wherever he could. Before he had made the room available to the American, he went on to say, he had asked his bishop, who had said that as long as he did not take sides in the unpleasantness between the Saigon regime and the People’s Liberation Army, he should do anything he felt would help his people.

  When the people of the Blessed Heart of Jesus parish went to the church for midnight mass on Christmas E
ve, they found Father Lo Patrick Sho, Mayor Song Lee Do, and four altar boys in the sanctuary between the communion rail and the altar.

  The altar boys had been shot in the ear.

  Father Lo Patrick Sho and Mayor Song Lee Do had had their throats cut and then had been emasculated.

  Captain Van Lee Duc regretted the necessity of ordering that action, but he was under orders, too, and Colonel Hon Kwan of the Fifty-third Regiment had told him that nothing could be permitted to interfere with the ruthless rooting out of opposition by the People’s Liberation Army.

  (Two)

  204 Wallingford Road

  Swarthmore, Pennsylvania

  1930 Hours, 24 December 1961

  The chiming of the doorbell annoyed the hell out of Edward Eaglebury, Sr. Who the fuck would come calling on Christmas Eve without telephoning?

  As he pushed himself out of his chair to take care of the damn thing, he decided that it was probably somebody collecting for some damned do-gooder cause. Starving Ethiopian Orphans or something. There had been a piece in the Bulletin about that. The fund raisers had found that people were extraordinarily generous on Christmas Eve, and teams of volunteer do-gooders were giving up their Christmas Eve to make the collecting rounds.

  Edward Eaglebury, Sr., had nothing against charity, but he thought that it was outrageous that fund raisers should be working on Christmas Eve. He would give whomever the hell it was a dollar and wish him a quick Merry Christmas and close the door in his face.

  Suzanne and the kids were with them tonight. Christmas Day they would go to her family. That meant that as soon as they finished trimming the tree, they would be exchanging gifts tonight instead of Christmas morning, as was the Eaglebury custom. Except for watching the kids when they got their presents, the truth was that Edward Eaglebury, Sr., didn’t give a damn about Christmas.

  And now some sonofabitch was at the door with his hand out.

  It was a vaguely familiar young man.

  Someone who was chasing Dianne and who was not willing to give up the chase simply because of a little thing like Christmas Eve. Why the hell wasn’t the fucker home with his own family?

  “Yes?” Edward Eaglebury, Sr., asked with less edge in his voice than he felt.

  “Good evening, Mr. Eaglebury,” the young man said. “Merry Christmas, sir.”

  “Merry Christmas to you,” Mr. Eaglebury said. “What can I do for you?”

  “I’d hoped to see Dianne, sir,” the young man said.

  “I don’t wish to be rude, young man,” Mr. Eaglebury said, “but we’re celebrating Christmas Eve. It’s—I don’t know how to say it—just family.”

  “Oh,” the young man said, obviously disappointed. “I’m sorry to have intruded, sir. I wonder if you would give her this?”

  He thrust a small, Christmas-wrapped package at him.

  Damn! If he knows her well enough to give her a present, she’d probably bought one for him. And I will be doing the wrong thing by sending him away.

  “Just a moment,” Edward Eaglebury, Sr., said. “I’ll get her.”

  He felt something like Scrooge, shutting the door and leaving the kid standing in the cold on the porch, but he didn’t want him inside, didn’t want him intruding.

  “One of your admirers is on the porch,” he announced when he went into the living room.

  “One of my what?” Dianne asked.

  “You left him standing on the porch on Christmas Eve?” his wife asked.

  He elected to respond to his daughter: “A young man bearing a gift,” he said. “I forget his name.”

  Dianne walked to the door.

  She’ll be gone, too, in three or four years, Edward Eaglebury thought. The boys are already after her. And then there will be just two of us in this house.

  She knew this one, too. She gave a little yelp when she saw him through the glass beside the door, and then she shouted his name: “Tom!” He could not recall any one of her boyfriends being named Tom.

  She brought the kid into the living room. He should have known that she would do something like that.

  “Everybody but Daddy remembers Tom, don’t they?” Dianne asked.

  “Of course,” his wife said.

  Suzanne, who had been on her knees by a box of Christmas-tree ornaments, scrambled to her feet. There was surprise and pleasure on her face.

  “Oh, Tom!” she said. “How nice to see you!”

  She went quickly to him, grabbed his arms and kissed his cheek.

  Who the hell is he?

  “Please forgive my husband, Lieutenant Ellis,” his wife said, “when he is into the Christmas cheer, he turns into Scrooge. I apologize for his leaving you standing in the cold.”

  She went to him and gave him a hug.

  My God, he’s the young officer who was with Eddie! The one who brought his body back. What does he want here?

  The answer to that was self-evident: Dianne. How the hell had he had time to get to know her? He wasn’t here more than five, six hours all told. And now he shows up on Christmas Eve with a present for her.

  “Oh, damn!” Dianne said when Ellis handed her the present. “I mailed you yours.”

  “What are you doing up in this neck of the woods?” Suzanne asked.

  “My mother lives in New York,” Tom said. “I’m on my way there now. I just stopped in to wish Dianne and all of you Merry Christmas.”

  “Well, I’m glad you did,” Dianne’s mother said. “Dianne, get him a glass of eggnog.”

  “You’re going on to New York…City?…Tonight?” Suzanne asked.

  “Yes,” Tom Ellis said.

  “And you drove from North Carolina?” she asked.

  He nodded.

  “You’ve apparently been seeing Dianne at Duke?” Mr. Eaglebury asked.

  “Yes, sir,” Tom said.

  “He came there with an ‘A’ Team and blew up the campus,” Dianne said. “They made a leak in the water tower.”

  “That’s what you’re doing, Tom?” Mr. Eaglebury asked. “Training young people? Like you trained Ed?”

  “No, sir,” Ellis said, and then thought it over. “No, sir, twice. Commander Eaglebury and I trained together. I was training the people I had at Duke. And I’m not doing that anymore.”

  “He’s General Hanrahan’s aide,” Dianne said proudly as she handed him a cup of eggnog. “Daddy made that. Be careful.”

  “General Hanrahan?” Mr. Eaglebury asked. “Is he the fellow who was here for the funeral?”

  “Yes, sir,” Tom said. “He was promoted.”

  “If you’re driving onto New York,” Mrs. Eaglebury said, “that egg nog may not be such a good idea. Do you have to be there tonight? Could you stay over? We have more than enough room.”

  The fucker’s going to accept. He’s actually going to intrude on our family Christmas.

  “I really have to go,” Tom refused politely. “But thank you anyway.”

  “Anytime you’re here, Tom,” Mrs. Eaglebury said, “we’d love to have you.”

  “Thank you very much,” he said. “I’ll take a rain check.”

  “Are you hungry?” Dianne asked.

  He shook his head.

  “Don’t be bashful, Tom,” Mrs. Eaglebury said. “We have more food than we know what to do with.”

  “There was a McDonald’s when I came off the interstate,” he said. “I had coffee and a whatever they call the big one.”

  “That’s indecent on Christmas Eve,” Suzanne said. “You should have waited until you got here.”

  “I thought it would be quicker,” Tom said. “I’m a little pressed for time.” He looked at his watch. “I just wanted to say Merry Christmas.”

  You just wanted to see Dianne. Who do you think you’re kidding?

  “I’ll walk you to your car,” Dianne said.

  “You’ll catch your death of cold,” Mr. Eaglebury said.

  “Ed!” Mrs. Eaglebury said.

  “Ed, what?”

  “Ed, mind
your own damned business,” she said.

  “It was nice to see you all,” Tom said, and went to Suzanne and Mrs. Eaglebury, who kissed his cheek. He picked up Little Ed.

  “He looks like the commander,” he said.

  “Doesn’t he?” Suzanne agreed.

  That’s not really a compliment; you really didn’t have to say that.

  He shook Mr. Eaglebury’s hand.

  “It was nice to see you,” Mr. Eaglebury said dutifully. “Sure you can’t stay over?”

  “Thank you, no, sir,” Tom said.

  A minute later Edward Eaglebury, Sr., pushed aside the curtain.

  “He’s kissing her,” he announced.

  “No!” Suzanne said in mock horror.

  “I told you before,” his wife said, “Ed, mind your own damned business.”

  “She’s nineteen years old, she is my business.”

  “He’s a very nice boy,” Mrs. Eaglebury said.

  “You think so?” he said. “I was wondering what she saw in him. He’s sort of a runt, actually. And—”

  “I know what she sees in him, Dad,” Suzanne said. “What I saw in Ed. There’s something special about people like that, people who do what they do.”

  “You’re not suggesting there’s anything serious going on between them, are you?”

  “No, I think he came all the way out here because he had nothing better to do on Christmas Eve,” Suzanne said. “Didn’t you see the way she looked at him?”

  “No,” he said flatly. “I didn’t see anything like that at all.”

  “What’s wrong with him?” his wife asked. “He’s nice, and he’s pleasant, and he already has a career.”

  “Did I say anything was wrong with him?”

  He looked out the window again. Ellis still hadn’t left. He was still kissing Dianne.

 

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