The air smells like red dust and jet fuel, and somewhere behind you a jukebox is playing Creedence Clearwater Revival through speakers that have no business sounding this good twelve thousand miles from home. Hit subscribe if you want to be here for this one, and drop a comment, tell me where you are listening from tonight.
You are standing outside the enlisted men’s club at Tuy Hòa, South Vietnam, and the year is 1969, and the beer in your hand is cold. Not cool. Cold. The kind of cold that sweats against your palm and makes a ring on the wooden railing where you set it down.
The base was built for the Air Force — a model installation, they called it — and the Air Force builds things the way the Air Force does everything: with air conditioning and concrete and the quiet assumption that comfort is not a luxury but a logistical requirement. There is a post exchange with shelves. A beach where the waves come in long and white against sand the color of brown sugar.
A movie theater that shows films only three months behind stateside release. From where you stand, with the Creedence and the cold beer and the late-afternoon sun turning the hills gold, you could almost forget what country you are in. Almost. Because in forty-five minutes, a sergeant is going to read your name off a list, and you are going to pick up your rifle, your pack, your magazines, and walk out through the wire into a darkness that has nothing to do with the one inside the club. The jukebox will keep playing. The beer will keep sweating on the railing. Someone else will
drink it. And you will spend the next ten hours lying in a rice paddy with your face in the mud, holding a small plastic device in your hand that, if you squeeze it, will send seven hundred steel balls into whatever is standing in front of you. That is the deal. That is the arrangement.
Daytime belongs to you, and the night belongs to someone else, and the border between the two is not dawn or dusk but a name on a list and a sergeant’s voice calling it. The veterans at the 1st Battalion, 22nd Infantry would later describe this life with a single word: surreal. Not the patrols. Not the ambushes. The gap between.
The distance a man travels between a cold beer at four in the afternoon and a Claymore mine at midnight — that distance, they said, was the thing that bent you. Not the fear. The whiplash. You could handle fear. What wore the edges off your mind was eating ice cream from the mess hall, walking back to your hooch to clean your rifle, and knowing that both activities were equally real and equally part of the same Tuesday.
The sun drops lower. Shadows stretch across the red laterite that covers everything here — your boots, your trousers, the creases of your hands. In the dry season, this dust is finer than talcum powder. You cannot squeeze a handful of it without it running through your fingers like water. It films your teeth when you breathe through your mouth.
It turns the horizon pink at sunset, which would be beautiful if it were not also turning the inside of your rifle a shade that means you will spend twenty minutes cleaning it before tonight’s patrol. The base hums around you. Generators provide the low note — a steady sixty-cycle drone that sits beneath everything else the way a bass line sits beneath a song.
Over that, helicopters. Always helicopters. They cross the sky in ones and twos, heading north toward the mountains or south toward the coast, their rotors chopping the air into a rhythm your ears stopped noticing three weeks after you arrived. Above the helicopters, the high whisper of fixed-wing aircraft too far up to see.
And under all of it, human noise — boots on gravel, the clang of a mess tray, someone laughing in a hooch two rows down, a radio tuned to Armed Forces Vietnam playing a song you will never hear again without smelling red dust. Down the gravel path, a row of hooches stands empty. Not abandoned — emptied. The 4th Battalion shipped out three weeks ago under a policy that Washington calls Vietnamization and the men still here call a slow goodbye.
South Vietnamese forces take over the fighting while American units withdraw in stages, the numbers on the briefing board shrinking each month. President Nixon announced the first withdrawals six months ago, and since then the base has developed gaps — vacant hooches, quieter mess lines, a PX with shelves that restock slower than they empty. The war is not ending.
The American part of the war is ending, which is not the same thing, and the men still drawing night patrol understand the distinction. Across the road, near the south perimeter, a platoon of South Vietnamese soldiers — ARVN, Army of the Republic of Vietnam — is running drills in the late heat. Their uniforms are American-issue but fit differently on smaller frames, the sleeves rolled to elbows.
They have been here for two weeks, learning the procedures your unit will leave behind when it ships out. Night ambush techniques. Radio protocols. Claymore placement. The same briefing Reeves will give you in an hour, translated into Vietnamese by a liaison officer who smokes constantly and carries a phrase book held together with tape.
Some of these ARVN soldiers have been fighting longer than anyone on this base — years longer, in a war that started before most American infantrymen learned to drive. They do not need to be taught how to fight. They need to be taught how to fight with American equipment, American fire support — systems they will inherit the way a younger brother inherits clothes that were not cut for him. You finish the beer.
The aluminum is warm now where the cold has retreated up into the can. The last swallow is flat and body-temperature and you drink it anyway because it is the last thing you will taste for a while that is not canteen water or the chemical ghost of purification tablets. A detail you will not learn until years later: the perimeter minefield at the 25th Infantry Division’s base at Cu Chi had a name.
Soldiers called it Ann-Margret, after the actress who came through with the USO. A minefield named after a dancer. That is the kind of fact this war produces — the beautiful and the lethal wearing each other’s clothes. The sergeant appears in the doorway of the hooch. He does not shout. He does not need to.
The list is short tonight — nine names, one squad, your squad — and by the time he reaches the fourth name you are already moving, because the sound of names being read in that particular cadence has a gravity to it. It pulls you toward your gear the way a current pulls a swimmer. Inside the hooch, the light is yellow and thin. Your bunk is a canvas cot with a mosquito net bunched at one end.
Your gear is arranged the way you always arrange it: rifle against the wall, pack at the foot, magazines in a row on the footlocker. The arrangement is personal, a system built from weeks of repetition until your hands can find everything in the dark. You sit on the cot. The canvas groans. Your boots are already laced — you learned early never to unlace your boots here, because the thirty seconds it takes to tie them could be thirty seconds you do not have — and the weight of what is coming settles across your shoulders before the pack does. Not dread, exactly. Something more practiced
than dread. Dread is what you felt the first time. What you feel now is a kind of focused narrowing, a funneling of attention from the wide, lazy sprawl of a base-camp afternoon into the tight aperture of a patrol. The world gets smaller. The things that matter get fewer. Beer does not matter. Music does not matter.
The girl in the photograph tucked inside your helmet liner — she matters, but distantly, the way a star matters. Present, important, too far away to warm you. The ceiling fan turns above your head, clicking on each rotation where one blade is off-balance. The click is familiar. In ten minutes, you will not hear it anymore. In ten minutes, you will be outside, where the only clicks that matter are the ones you make on purpose and the ones someone else makes in the dark. You stand. You reach for your pack.
The jukebox is still playing. You can hear it through the hooch wall, muffled now, the bass notes traveling further than the melody. Someone has put on the same Creedence song again — the one about rain — and you allow yourself the smallest smile, because the timing is either perfect or terrible, and in this place, those two words mean the same thing.
The fan clicks. The music plays. The red dust settles on everything you leave behind. Claymores first. You pull two from the crate near the arms room and hold one in each hand, feeling the weight settle — three and a half pounds apiece, curved plastic the color of week-old moss. On the front of each one, raised letters you can read with your fingers in total darkness: FRONT TOWARD ENEMY.
Someone in a factory in the United States decided those words needed to be embossed rather than painted, and that decision was either a commentary on the American soldier’s attention span or a genuine act of care. Either way, your thumb traces the letters each time you pick one up. A habit. A small, involuntary prayer to the god of getting things pointed the right direction. Each mine comes in a bandolier — the M7 bag, olive drab, slung over the shoulder.
Inside: the mine, a spool of green wire holding a hundred feet of firing cord, and the M57 firing device. The clacker. That is the word everyone uses, because the sound it makes when you squeeze it — a hard, metallic snap — is the last sound you hear before the world in front of you becomes something else. You check the wire for nicks. You check the blasting cap for corrosion.
You check the clacker by feel, running your thumb over the safety bail, pressing without squeezing. Behind you, Dominguez is loading magazines. He does this the same way every time — eighteen rounds per magazine instead of twenty, because a full magazine puts too much pressure on the spring and the first round can jam on the feed. Everybody knows this trick. Everybody does it.
Eighteen rounds, a tap on the helmet to seat them, then into the ammo pouch. He works through six magazines without speaking, and the only sound is the small click-click-click of brass sliding into steel, a rhythm as regular as a pulse. The RTO — Kowalski, who never wanted the job and got it because he could spell — is checking the PRC-25.
The radio sits on the floor of the hooch like a metal lunchbox designed by someone who hated lunch. Two olive-drab cans stacked together: battery on the bottom, receiver on top. Twenty-three and a half pounds with the battery. A three-foot whip antenna screws into the top, and a ten-foot long-range antenna rides in a canvas bag strapped to the side for when the terrain eats the signal.
General Abrams called it the most important piece of field equipment in Vietnam. The soldiers who carried it called it something shorter and less flattering. Kowalski wraps the handset in the battery pack’s clear plastic packaging, seals it with a rubber band.
Moisture is the enemy of the handset — one wet connector and the radio becomes twenty-three pounds of dead weight on a man’s back. The plastic wrap is not in any manual. It is the kind of invention that comes from carrying a radio through a monsoon and swearing to God you will never let it happen again. He tests the squelch. A soft hiss fills the hooch, then cuts to silence when the circuit locks.
He keys the handset, whispers a frequency check to the Company CP, receives a burst of static that means someone on the other end is awake and listening. The batteries last two, maybe three hours of heavy use. When they run out, you do not leave them behind. A lessons-learned report from the 4th Infantry Division explains why: the NVA collected spent batteries and wired them into booby traps.
Even a dead battery holds enough charge to set off a blasting cap. You carry your garbage because your garbage is ammunition for the next ambush. Sergeant Reeves holds the briefing in the space between two hooch rows, using a poncho liner spread on the ground as a map table. The map itself is creased and worn at the folds, marked with grease pencil in colors that mean different things: blue for friendlies, red for known enemy positions, green for the route out. The coordinates he reads off put the ambush site at a trail junction southeast of the base,
near a cluster of rice paddies that intelligence says the VC have been using as a transit route. He talks the way all good sergeants talk in briefings: flat, specific, unhurried. The route out follows a dry stream bed for six hundred meters, then cuts south through a stand of bamboo into open paddy.
The ambush position sits where two trails cross — a natural choke point where anyone moving through will bunch up. Fire teams will deploy in an L-shape: Alpha team on the long arm parallel to the main trail, Bravo team on the short arm covering the secondary approach. Claymores go out front, angled to cover the killing zone with overlapping arcs. The M-60 anchors the base of the L.
Before the American buildup in 1965, a saying circulated through the military advisors already in-country: the night belongs to the Viet Cong. It was not a figure of speech. The VC moved, resupplied, recruited, and fought primarily after dark, using trail networks maintained since the war against the French. American infantry spent those early nights in defensive hedgehog positions — armed circles, sitting in place, hoping the enemy would come and praying he would not.
The shift to active night ambush patrols came later, after divisions like the 25th Infantry set up ambush academies in-country, teaching squads to do what Reeves is briefing you to do right now: go out, lie down, wait, and take the night back. On any given evening in 1969, hundreds of American ambush patrols deploy across South Vietnam. Yours is one of them.
Your patrol is not the same as the long-range reconnaissance teams — the LRRPs — who operate deeper in the jungle in four- or six-man groups, sometimes days from the nearest firebase, watching trails and calling in air strikes on targets they will never engage themselves. LRRP teams are volunteers, specially selected, trained in escape and evasion because extraction is never guaranteed.
Your squad is conventional infantry doing a conventional mission: set up within range of friendly artillery, wait for a defined period, engage or do not engage, and walk home by morning. The LRRPs trade safety for information. You trade sleep for a stretch of trail that the enemy might or might not use tonight. One thing Reeves does not say, because he does not need to: stay off the trails.
The trails belong to the people who prepared them, and the preparation is not friendly. Eleven percent of all casualties in this war come from traps and mines. Some sources put it higher. The number matters less than the principle: the ground is not neutral here. You pick up the point man’s position for tonight. This was not volunteered.
It was assigned, because your map-reading scores were the highest in the platoon, and in the infantry, competence is a punishment disguised as a compliment. The point man walks first and sees what nobody else sees. The point man is also the first to step on whatever is waiting. Your pack goes on last.
The straps bite into your shoulders — sixty-two pounds tonight, which is light by the standards of a multi-day patrol but heavy enough that your body registers the addition the way a scale registers a stone. Rifle, magazines, two Claymores in their bandoliers, four canteens, a poncho you will not be allowed to use, C-rations you may not have time to eat, two fragmentation grenades hanging from the shoulder straps like ugly fruit. A first-aid kit. A compass.
A strobe light for emergency helicopter evacuation, which you carry the way a swimmer carries a whistle — because the alternative is not carrying one. The sun is behind the hills now. The sky is the color of a bruise — purple and yellow at the western edge, fading to a grey-blue overhead that will be black within the hour. The temperature has already dropped five degrees, and by midnight it will drop twenty more.
In the highlands, the nights can reach the mid-fifties — cool enough to stiffen your fingers, cold enough that the sweat soaking your fatigues will turn from a comfort to an enemy. You look down the line. Nine men. Nine packs. Nine rifles. Dominguez is tightening a strap. Kowalski adjusts the radio on his back, settling the weight higher between his shoulder blades where it will not slide.
The M-60 gunner — a kid from Arkansas whose name you always want to spell differently than he does — cradles the gun across his chest the way other men carry infants. Reeves nods. No speech. No motivation. Just the nod, and the first step, and the sound of boots on gravel as the squad begins to move toward the perimeter wire, leaving behind the generators, the club, the jukebox, the cold beer, the fan with the clicking blade, and everything else that belongs to the version of Vietnam that fits inside a postcard.
The wire is ahead. The dark is behind it. Through the wire, the world changes in the space of ten steps. The perimeter is concertina — coiled razor wire strung between metal stakes in rows that angle outward like the spines of something alive. A gap in the wire marks the patrol exit, narrow enough that you turn sideways to pass through, the bandolier of Claymore gear brushing the coils on your right.
The wire hums faintly in the breeze, a thin metallic note too high for most ears but present in yours because your ears are already opening, already reaching past the base noise and into the space beyond. On the base side of the wire, the ground is groomed. Beaten earth, cleared fields of fire, the bunker line with its sandbag walls and the dark slits of firing ports.
On the far side, the ground is Vietnam. Unmanaged. Unbothered. Grass as tall as your chest appears within twenty meters of the wire, and the smell shifts — diesel and red dust giving way to green things growing, water standing in low places, the sweet vegetable rot of a landscape that has been farming itself for centuries without asking permission from anyone who came here with a rifle.
You are on point. The man behind you is three meters back, and the man behind him is three meters further, and the line stretches out behind you in a single file that would look, from the air, like a thread being pulled through fabric. Everyone walks in the footsteps of the man ahead. Not for comfort. For survival.
The ground here has been prepared by people who want you to step in the wrong place, and the preparation is older than your presence — the Viet Cong learned it from the Viet Minh, who used the same methods against the French a generation ago. Sharpened bamboo stakes in covered pits, the tips hardened by fire and sometimes coated in waste to cause infection.
Trip wires strung at ankle height between trees, connected to grenades with the pins half-pulled. Cartridge traps — a single rifle round buried nose-up in a bamboo tube with a nail beneath it, so that the weight of a boot fires the bullet straight through the sole. The 4th Infantry Division runs its own mine-warfare school for new arrivals, a course that teaches men to spot the signs — broken branches, displaced leaves, sticks arranged in patterns that mark safe passage for those who placed them. You walk where the man ahead walked because his footsteps are the
only proven safe ground, and if he is wrong, at least the mistake belongs to one man and not nine. The elephant grass comes first. It rises around you like a wall made of blades, and that comparison is not figurative — the edges of the stalks are sharp enough to open skin.
Your forearms, rolled to the elbow because the heat demands it, collect thin red lines that sting when sweat finds them. The grass closes over your head and the sky becomes a narrow strip above you, pale and retreating. Sound changes in the grass. Your boots make a dry swishing noise against the stalks that seems impossibly loud. Every step announces itself.
The grass rustles when you push through, and the rustling carries — how far, you do not know, but further than you would like. Then the grass ends and the treeline begins, and the world drops from gold to green to something close to grey. Under the canopy, the light does not arrive so much as it leaks. The first layer of branches filters the sun into shafts that land on the forest floor in bright coins.
The second layer catches most of what the first missed. In places where a third layer exists — the triple canopy, fifty feet above — the floor is in permanent twilight. Midday looks like dusk. Your eyes adjust. The pupils open wider, and the shapes of tree trunks and root structures emerge from what seemed a solid wall of vegetation.
The air is thicker here — warmer, wetter, close against your face. You breathe through your nose because it is quieter and because the air carries information: the mineral smell of standing water, the sweetness of flowering vine, the sharp tang of something decomposing nearby. The trail follows the stream bed. Dry now, in the weeks between monsoons, the stream bed is a winding ditch of smooth stones and sandy soil with the memory of water in its shape.
You walk along the edge, not in the center, because the center is where someone would expect you to walk. Your boots find purchase on roots and stones, and the sound of nine men moving through forest is quieter than you would expect — the canopy absorbs noise the way a curtain absorbs light, swallowing the high notes and softening the rest into a muffled shuffle that blends with the sounds already present.
And there are sounds already present. The forest is not quiet. It is layered. At the bottom, the baseline: the hum of insects too small to see, a frequency so constant it registers as silence until you listen for it. Above that, crickets. Hundreds of them, maybe thousands, each one producing a note that overlaps with the next until the combined sound is a single high-pitched wash, steady as static.
Higher still, the occasional call of a bird settling for the night — a descending whistle, two notes, the second lower than the first, repeated three times and then silence. You file this. All of it. The crickets are the alarm system. They sing when the forest is at rest. When they stop, something is moving nearby that the crickets do not recognize as ordinary.
You do not know this yet from experience. You know it because Reeves told you, and Reeves was told by a man who learned it by being present when the silence meant something. Dusk deepens. The coins of light on the forest floor dim and vanish one by one, as if someone is walking through a room turning off lamps. Color drains next — the greens go grey, the browns go black, and the distinction between shadow and object blurs until the world is a mosaic of dark shapes against darker backgrounds.
Your hand finds the pistol grip of your rifle by feel. The safety is on. Your thumb rests on it. Ahead, the stream bed widens and the trees thin, and through the gap you can see the rice paddies — flat, silver-grey in the failing light, stretching to a distant treeline that is already a silhouette. Water stands in the paddies, shallow and still, reflecting the last color of the sky.
The paddies smell different from the forest: earthier, deeper, the anaerobic smell of mud that has been wet for so long it has forgotten what dry means. Somewhere out there, frogs have already started. Their calls carry across the flat water — low, rhythmic, insistent. Reeves appears at your shoulder. He does not touch you. He points.
Two fingers, extended, aimed at a low rise of ground where the two trails meet — the spot on the map, made real by the landscape. The ambush site. From here it looks like nothing. A slight elevation where the paddy dikes cross, a patch of scrub, a tree with roots that spread above the waterline. Nothing that would draw the eye. That is the point. You nod. He falls back.
The squad condenses behind you, closing the intervals from three meters to one, and you lead them down the bank of the stream bed and into the open paddy. The water is ankle-deep and warm — not hot, not cold, just the temperature of the air, which means it feels like nothing, which means after a while you forget your boots are wet until the skin between your toes begins to wrinkle and itch.
The sky above the paddy is enormous. Without the canopy, the stars are beginning — just the first ones, the bright ones, punching through the blue-grey like sparks. The open space feels exposed after the forest. No cover. Just flat water and flat land and a sky that sees everything. You cross the paddy in silence.
Nine men, ankle-deep, leaving trails in the water that close behind them — completely, without record. The ambush site is fifty meters ahead. The last of the light is going. Somewhere to the east, in the treeline you cannot see, the insects are building their wall of sound, and the frogs are joining, and the night is assembling itself from ten thousand small voices that will become, over the next twelve hours, the most important thing you hear.
Your feet find the dry ground of the rise. The water drains from your boots. You crouch. The patrol has arrived. The night has not yet begun. The rise is barely a rise at all. Two feet above the paddy waterline, maybe less, enough elevation that the ground is damp instead of submerged.
Scrub grass grows here in clumps that reach your waist when you kneel, and the root structure of a single tree — a species you never learned the name of, broad-leafed and twisted at the trunk — spreads outward in a tangle that provides the closest thing to cover this landscape offers. Behind the roots, the ground is compressed earth with a crust of dried mud that cracks softly under your knees.
Reeves places the teams with hand signals. No voice. From here forward, everything is gesture, touch, or the barest whisper pressed directly into the ear of the man beside you. Alpha team takes the long arm of the L, spreading along the main trail in a line that runs roughly north-south. Three men, six meters apart.
Bravo team folds around the corner of the junction, covering the secondary path from the east. Two men. The M-60 sits at the junction itself, the base of the L, where its arc of fire overlaps both approaches. The junction matters because the trails matter. The Viet Cong operate on a supply network that stretches from the Cambodian border through the Central Highlands to the coastal lowlands, a web of paths maintained by local guerrillas who know every stream crossing and tree marker the way you know the streets of your hometown. The main trail here connects the highland
forests to the rice paddies below — the route that porters use to carry ammunition, rice, and medical supplies on their backs in loads of forty to sixty pounds, moving only at night, covering ten to fifteen kilometers before dawn sends them into hiding. The secondary trail feeds in from a village to the east. Where the two paths cross, traffic funnels. People bunch up.
They slow down. They become, for thirty seconds, predictable. That predictability is why nine men are lying in wet grass at this hour instead of sleeping on dry cots behind concertina wire. Kowalski and the radio settle three meters behind Reeves, close enough to pass the handset without moving.
You are at the far end of Alpha, the position nearest the direction any contact will come from first. The spread, when everyone is in place, covers about forty meters from flank to flank. Forty meters of scrub and root and paddy dike, nine men pressed flat against the earth with six to eight meters of dark air between each pair. This is the geometry of the ambush: wide enough to cover the killing zone, tight enough that fire from both teams converges on the same space.
A textbook arrangement — the same one practiced at the Division’s ambush school, the same one taught at Benning, the same one Sergeant Lloyd Jones used with the 25th Infantry in the same kind of paddy on the same kind of night in 1968. The geometry works. Whether you are inside it when it matters is a different question. Claymores go out first.
You belly-crawl forward from your position, moving on elbows and knees through the wet grass, the bandolier dragging beside you. The mine is in your hands now — curved plastic, the convex face toward the trail, the concave back toward you. You unfold the metal scissor legs and press them into the soft earth until the mine stands on its own, tilted slightly upward, the embossed letters facing the trail. You cannot read them in this dark.
You do not need to. Your thumb traces the letters anyway — FRONT TOWARD ENEMY — and the ritual completes the circuit between your hands and your confidence. The wire unspools behind you as you crawl back. A hundred feet of green-jacketed cord, thin as a bootlace, pressed flat against the ground. At your position, you connect the wire to the clacker — the M57, a plastic handle with a squeeze mechanism that generates an electrical charge.
The safety bail sits across the top. You flip it open. The clacker is live. One mine out. Dominguez has placed the second, fifteen meters to the right, angled to cover the far edge of the killing zone. Two Claymores, two arcs of seven hundred steel balls apiece, overlapping in the center of the trail junction like a Venn diagram drawn in metal.
Anything standing in the overlap when both fire simultaneously will cease to be standing in a time frame measured in fractions of a second. The Starlight scope comes out of its case. It belongs to the squad the way a family heirloom belongs to a family — passed from hand to hand, treated with a care that borders on reverence, carried by whoever has the steadiest grip and the patience to stare through it for hours.
Tonight that is Watkins, a specialist from Ohio who does not talk much and sees things other people miss. He mounts the scope on his M16 and settles it against his shoulder, and for a long moment he scans the treeline, the trail, the far paddy edge. The scope weighs six pounds. It takes whatever light exists — starlight, moonlight, the reflected glow of cloud cover — and multiplies it until the dark becomes a green-grey landscape of shapes and shadows.
Trees are pale columns against dark ground. The trail is a lighter stripe winding between them. At four times magnification, a man at two hundred meters becomes a recognizable shape. On a clear night, the scope can distinguish a rifle from a stick at a hundred meters. Under heavy cloud or dense canopy, it is nearly useless — six pounds of reminder that technology has limits.
Tonight the sky is partly clear. Enough stars to power the scope. Watkins sweeps the treeline in slow arcs, pausing where the shadows pool deepest, then moving on. He sees nothing. He reports nothing. The absence is not comforting. It is information — a snapshot of one moment, already outdated by the time it registers. The radio check is the last piece.
Kowalski keys the handset — one click, a pause, two clicks. The Company CP responds: two clicks, a pause, one click. The exchange takes four seconds and says everything that needs saying. We are here. We are set. We are listening. The squelch hisses once and goes silent, and the radio becomes another weight on Kowalski’s back, alive but mute, waiting for a voice to give it purpose.
You settle into your position. The ground beneath you is a mosaic of textures — hard-packed dirt under your chest, grass beneath your elbows, a root pressing into your left hip that you shift to accommodate. Your rifle lies across your forearms, the barrel pointed toward the trail, the magazine seated and the safety on.
The clacker sits in your right hand, the handle warm from your grip. Your left hand is flat on the ground, fingers spread, feeling the earth the way a blind man reads a page. The paddy stretches out in front of you, flat and grey and featureless under a sky that is making up its mind between clear and clouded. The trail junction is thirty meters away.
At that distance, in this dark, you can see the intersection as a faint convergence of two lighter paths against the darker paddy. With the Starlight scope, Watkins can see more. Without it, you see shapes and trust your ears to fill in the rest. Nine men are now invisible.
Pressed flat, faces down, weapons out, breathing through their mouths because mouth-breathing is steadier and steadiness matters when you are trying not to move for the next eight hours. The squad has become part of the landscape — nine disruptions in the surface of the earth that only a very attentive eye could detect. Reeves makes one last circuit.
He moves along the line in a low crawl, stopping at each position to check fields of fire, check Claymore wire, check the spacing. At your position, he pauses. His hand finds your shoulder and squeezes once — a gesture that means everything is correct, or that he trusts you, or that he has nothing more to say and the squeeze is the period at the end of the sentence. He moves on.
The last of the preparation is silence. Not the silence of a room with the door closed, but the active silence of nine men choosing not to make sound. A deliberate emptying. The clink of a buckle that you press against your chest to muffle. The breath you hold when your stomach growls.
The itch on your collarbone that you do not scratch because the motion of an arm through grass has a whisper to it that carries. You become still. Not relaxed — stillness and relaxation are different countries — but still. Held. Compressed. A spring with the tension set. The ambush is in place. The Claymores are armed. The scope is scanning. The radio is live. Now you wait. Darkness does not fall in the tropics.
It arrives. One moment the treeline across the paddy is a black wall with the suggestion of treetops against the sky. The next, the sky and the wall are the same shade, and the horizon ceases to exist. The transition takes less time than it should — ten minutes, maybe fifteen — and when it is complete, the world shrinks to the distance your hands can reach and no further.
Then the jungle turns itself on. It begins with the lowest register. The hum. A vibration more felt than heard, generated by insects so small they are invisible even in daylight. Millions of them, the entomology of a landscape that has been breeding since before the last ice age, each one producing a frequency that blends with the next into a single sustained tone.
The tone sits at the bottom of your hearing, beneath the range where you process individual sounds, and it fills the air the way water fills a glass — completely, without gaps, leaving no room for actual silence. This is the floor. Everything else builds on top of it. The crickets come next. Their sound is higher, sharper, a rapid pulsing that layers over the hum the way a snare drum layers over a bass line. Not one cricket. Not ten.
A number that defies counting — a carpet of sound rolling out from the treeline and across the paddies, filling the open space between you and the far bank with a wash of high-frequency noise so constant that within twenty minutes your brain will reclassify it as background and stop hearing it consciously. This is both a gift and a danger. The gift is sanity.
The danger is that the crickets are the alarm, and alarms only work if you notice when they stop. The frogs contribute the middle range. Their calls are deeper, wetter, produced by throat sacs that inflate and deflate in cycles timed to attract mates across the flooded paddies. Each frog holds a note for a beat, then rests, then holds again, and the staggered rhythm of hundreds of them creates a pulsing chorus that rises and falls like breathing.
The frogs are in the water around you — some within arm’s reach, invisible in the mud, their voices coming up from the ground as if the earth itself is speaking. And then, from the treeline, the gecko. The Tokay gecko is a foot long, grey-blue with orange spots, and it has a mating call that sounds like a man shouting a two-syllable profanity into the dark.
The soldiers who heard it gave it a name based on what it seemed to be saying, and that name is not printable here, but it is accurate. The call starts with a rising note — a bark that cuts through the insect wash like a knife through paper — and ends with a descending growl that hangs in the air for a moment before the next cycle begins. Once you have heard a Tokay gecko, you never forget the sound.
Once you have heard it at two in the morning while lying in a rice paddy with a Claymore detonator in your hand, the sound acquires a personal quality, as if the gecko is addressing you specifically and the message is not encouraging. Higher in the canopy, another voice. The Blue-eared Barbet — a bird the size of a fist, green-feathered — produces a deep, hollow note repeating at intervals of exactly three seconds.
The soldiers called it the re-up bird, because its call sounded like a recruiter asking the same question over and over. On rare nights, the gecko and the barbet called simultaneously, and the duet was absurd enough to make grown men with rifles bite their lips to keep from laughing. Between these voices, smaller sounds.
The rustle of something moving through leaf litter — a lizard, a rat, a snake. You cannot tell. The snap of a twig that might be an animal stepping on it or might be a branch releasing the last of the day’s heat and contracting. A splash in the paddy that is either a frog entering the water or a fish surfacing or something larger that you choose not to think about because your imagination is not your friend right now.
The air itself changes at night. The heat of the day, stored in the mud and water, rises in a warm layer that sits close to the ground, and above it, the cooler night air presses down, and the boundary between the two creates a damp, heavy blanket that wraps around your chest and face.
You breathe it in and it tastes green — not a flavor exactly, but a density, a wetness in the air that carries the chlorophyll of ten thousand plants and deposits it on your tongue. Your lungs feel heavier. Your skin, already wet with sweat, cannot tell the difference between its own moisture and the humidity, and the result is a coating — a film of warm water that covers every surface of your body and will not evaporate because the air is already full.
The mosquitoes find you within minutes. They come from the paddy water, drawn by the carbon dioxide in your breath and the heat of your body, arriving not individually but in clouds. The military-issue repellent — DEET concentrate that smells like chemicals and burns when it touches a cut — keeps some of them off your exposed skin.
It does nothing to the ones that bite through fabric. The fatigues are cotton, loosely woven, and the mosquitoes push their needles through the gaps between threads the way a seamstress pushes a pin through cloth. You feel the bites as small hot pricks on your forearms, your neck, the backs of your hands — and you do not slap. The sound of a hand striking skin carries further in the dark than the itch carries inside your body.
The DEET stings your eyes. You applied it to your forehead and the sweat has carried it down, and now the corners of your eyes burn with a low chemical fire that makes blinking feel like sandpaper. You cannot wipe your eyes. Your right hand holds the clacker. Your left hand holds the rifle.
Both are occupied with things more important than comfort, and the tears that form to wash the chemical away run down your cheeks and drip onto the ground without ceremony. Something moves across your ankle. You feel it through the fabric of your trouser leg — a slow, deliberate pressure, not a brush but a crawl. It weighs almost nothing. It has legs, or perhaps it does not.
The contact lasts three seconds, maybe four, and then whatever it is moves on, crossing from one side of your boot to the other and disappearing into the grass. You do not look. You cannot look — your night vision is adapted now, the pupils fully dilated, and turning your head to stare at your own foot would mean taking your eyes off the trail for the time it takes to refocus on a closer distance. You let it go.
You add it to the list of things that touched you in the dark that you chose not to investigate, and the list, by now, has entries you have never reconciled and probably never will. The night settles. The sounds find their rhythm. The insect hum, the cricket wash, the frog chorus, the gecko bark — they braid together into a single wall of sound that is both deafening and, after a time, strangely soothing.
The wall has a texture. It has rises and falls, moments where one voice dominates and then recedes, moments of near-silence that last half a second before the next cycle fills them. You learn the wall the way you learned the ship’s engine on the troop transport — by letting it become part of you, by absorbing it into the background of your consciousness until it stops being noise and starts being the baseline against which all other sounds are measured.
Because other sounds will come. And when they do, they will come as subtractions. Not as additions. Not the crack of a branch or the splash of a boot, but the absence of crickets in a patch of forest that should be singing. The hole in the wall. The quiet that means something is there that should not be. You breathe. The air is thick.
The mosquitoes feed. The gecko calls. The night is fully awake and you are inside it, a warm body in a warm paddy, holding a cold piece of plastic that can end a life with one squeeze, and the only thing separating this moment from violence is the same thing that separates silence from sound. Attention. Just attention.
Paid in the dark, in the mud, in the insect-loud, frog-loud, gecko-loud night of the Central Highlands, one breath at a time. Time behaves differently when you cannot move. In the first hour, it stretches. Minutes become elastic, each one containing more seconds than the one before, as if the dark is manufacturing extra time from the surplus silence.
You check your watch by bringing your wrist to your face and tilting it until the luminous hands catch enough light to read. The hands glow a faint green — radium paint, the same shade as the Starlight scope, as if everything designed to help you in the dark has agreed on a single color. The minute hand has moved less than you expected. It always moves less than you expected. Dominguez shifts beside you.
Not a real shift — not a turn or a stretch — but a small rearrangement of weight from one hip to the other, a motion so restrained it barely registers as movement. You hear it because you are listening to everything, and the sound of a man adjusting his body against the ground is distinct from the sound of the ground adjusting itself. The difference is intention.
The earth settles without trying. A man settles because something hurts. The guard rotation runs in two-hour blocks. One man watches while his partner rests. Not sleeps — resting and sleeping are different negotiations with the body, and only one of them is permitted. Resting means closing your eyes but keeping your ears at full gain.
It means letting your muscles soften without letting your awareness soften with them. It means lying on a paddy dike with your face against your forearm and tracking the sound environment for changes the way a navigator tracks the stars for drift. You are not off duty. You are in a lower gear. Your shift now. Dominguez drops his chin to his arms and his breathing changes within thirty seconds — longer exhales, the kind of breathing that sits on the border between awake and not. You do not blame him.
The body makes its own decisions after a certain number of hours without sleep, and the negotiations between discipline and exhaustion are conducted in a language the conscious mind can observe but not always control. The Starlight scope passes to you. Watkins hands it along the line in the dark, a careful transfer from one set of hands to the next, and when it reaches you, the weight of it — the full six pounds resting on your left forearm as you bring the eyepiece to your eye — feels like responsibility given physical form. You settle it against your cheek. The rubber eyecup presses into
your orbital bone. The green world opens. Through the scope, the paddy becomes a luminous plain. The water reflects what light the sky provides and amplifies it, turning the flat surface into a pale, glowing field crossed by the darker lines of the dikes. The trail junction is a convergence of lighter paths against the green-grey earth.
The treeline on the far side is a jagged edge of darker shapes — trunks, branches, the irregular canopy line silhouetted against a sky that the scope renders as a bright wash of amplified starlight. Every shape has a grainy quality, a texture like an old photograph enlarged beyond its resolution, and the image swims slightly as your eye adjusts, the scope picking up the micro-movements of your hands and translating them into a world that sways. You scan.
Left to right, then right to left, then center. The trail is empty. The treeline is still. A shape at the base of a tree resolves, under sustained observation, into a root structure rather than a crouching figure. The distinction takes four seconds of staring, four seconds where your eyes and brain argue before the eyes prevail.
This is the work. This is what the hours are made of. Scanning, interpreting, dismissing. A leaf falls and your pulse responds before your brain identifies it. A ripple crosses the paddy surface — wind, probably, or a frog — and you track it until it dissipates. The scope turns every movement into a potential contact and every stillness into a potential ambush, and the labor of sorting signal from noise in a landscape that is ninety-nine percent noise is the thing that wears on you more than the cold, more than the mosquitoes, more than the
weight of the clacker in your other hand. Kowalski breaks the silence at midnight. A whisper so quiet it barely crosses the two meters between you — the sit-rep call, scheduled, expected. He keys the handset once. The squelch breaks with a soft hiss. He murmurs the report into the mouthpiece, shielding it with his cupped hand the way a man shields a match from wind: position unchanged, no contact, all personnel accounted for.
The Company CP acknowledges with a double click. The exchange lasts eight seconds. In those eight seconds, the entire patrol is connected to the larger war — the TOC with its maps and radios, the firebase with its artillery, the helicopters on standby at the airfield. Then the handset goes back to Kowalski’s chest and the connection breaks and you are nine men in the dark again, alone with the frogs and the scope and the geometry of the ambush.
The hours between midnight and two are the longest. Not by the clock, but by the internal measure that tracks alertness and finds it declining. Your eyes dry out from the scope. You blink, and the blink lasts longer than it should, and you catch yourself and scan the treeline again. The cold has settled in. The air has a bite that reaches through your wet fatigues and presses against your chest.
You cannot shiver. Shivering is movement. You clench your jaw instead, and the tension spreads down your spine. The luminous hands say 0137. You have been watching for an hour and thirty-seven minutes. In twenty-three minutes, the rotation will pass the scope to the next man and you will drop into the half-sleep that passes for rest here. Twenty-three minutes. You count them without meaning to.
To pass the time, you listen to the intervals. The gecko calls every eleven seconds — you have timed it on the watch face, pressing your thumbnail against the glass at the start of each call and lifting it at the next. The barbet is slower. Every eighteen seconds, with a consistency that suggests the bird’s internal clock is more reliable than the one on your wrist.
Between them, the frogs maintain their overlapping pulses, and you begin to hear individual voices within the chorus — a deeper one to your left, a higher one from the far paddy, a stuttering one that starts and stops as if the frog keeps forgetting the lyrics. This is what you do. This is how the mind survives eight hours of motionless vigilance: it makes games. It counts. It categorizes.
It assigns personalities to frogs and keeps score between a gecko and a bird. The alternative is the thought that waits behind the games — the thought about the girl in the photograph, or the meal your mother makes on Sundays, or the campus you were on eleven months ago where the grass was a different color and the worst thing that could happen in the dark was a failed exam. That thought is heavier than the scope.
That thought, if you let it settle, will take your attention off the trail and put it somewhere warm, and warm is where the mistakes live. The NVA targeted the radio operators. That fact sits in your awareness like a stone in a boot. The PRC-25 with its whip antenna stood above a man’s head like a metal flag announcing: this is the one who calls for help.
The RTOs learned to bend the antenna, to wrap it, because a silent squad meant no artillery, no air support, no medevac. Kowalski is carrying the single object the enemy most wants to destroy. He knows this. He carries it anyway. You check the watch. 0152. Eight minutes. The gecko calls. The barbet answers.
The frogs pulse in the water around you, their voices rising from the mud as if the war has not reached this low, this close to the ground, as if the creatures who live at ankle level have negotiated a separate peace and are honoring its terms one mating call at a time. Eight minutes. Then you rest. Then you do this again. The scope shows nothing.
The trail is clear. The treeline holds its shape. You wait, because waiting is the job, and the job does not care about the cold, or the mosquitoes, or the gecko, or the girl, or the eight minutes. The job cares about the trail. So you watch the trail. Something changes at 0340 and it takes your body four seconds to tell your brain what it is.
The crickets to the south — the ones between your position and the secondary trail — have stopped. Not thinned. Stopped. A patch of silence has opened in the wall of sound, a hole the size of a room, spreading outward from a point in the scrub about eighty meters to your left. The frogs in that quadrant are still going. The crickets are not.
The distinction matters, because frogs are stubborn and will call through a thunderstorm, but crickets are tuned to vibration, and vibration means footsteps, and footsteps mean weight, and weight means something that is not a snake and not a rat and not the wind. Your hand tightens on the clacker. The safety bail is already open. One squeeze. You do not squeeze. Not yet.
You bring the scope up and sweep the secondary trail, scanning the area where the silence originated. The green world fills your eye — grainy, swimming, the paddy glowing faintly, the scrub a darker mass along the trail edge. Nothing moves. The trail is a pale line disappearing into the treeline, empty and still.
But the crickets remain silent, and the silence is drifting now, expanding north toward Alpha team’s position the way a ripple expands from a stone dropped in water. Whatever is causing it is moving. You reach left and touch Dominguez’s arm. One tap. He is awake instantly — not the slow surfacing of a man rising from sleep, but the immediate full-alert snap of a body that was never fully asleep.
His hand finds his rifle. His eyes find you. You point toward the secondary trail and hold up one finger. Wait. The signal passes down the line in whispered touches. Reeves receives it, and for three seconds there is no response, and then a single click on the radio — the alert signal, two short pulses to the Company CP. Artillery is now aware that the ambush may go active.
Somewhere at the firebase, a fire direction officer is leaning over a plotting board, calculating the coordinates you provided at the briefing, ready to send steel into the dark at a word from Kowalski’s handset. The scope finds them at 0347. Shapes on the trail. Single file, southeast to northwest, emerging from the treeline into the open paddy.
The scope renders them as pale green forms against darker ground — upright, carrying objects above shoulder height. At this distance, the objects could be rifles. The right length. The right angle. Four figures. No, five — a smaller shape separating from the treeline to close the gap. Your pulse moves into your ears.
You feel your heartbeat in the fingertips pressing against the clacker. The plastic is slick with hours of sweat. A quarter-inch of squeeze between this moment and the next. The M-60 gunner shifts beside you. Not a sound, but a change in the quality of his stillness. His finger is on the trigger guard, not the trigger, and that distance — the width of a knuckle — is the distance between a decision and its consequence. The figures enter the killing zone.
Thirty meters. Twenty-five. The lead figure pauses at the junction, directly between both Claymores, and turns its head. The objects they carry catch a faint gleam of amplified light. Reeves is beside you. He materialized from three meters away without a sound you registered, and his mouth is at your ear, and his whisper is so quiet it is more breath than language: “Hold.
” You hold. The clacker sits in your fist like a live coal. Your arm trembles — not from cold, not from fear, but from the sustained tension of a muscle held in a half-squeeze for too long. The trigger finger of the M-60 gunner has not moved. Dominguez has his M16 on the lip of the dike, the selector on auto, the stock against his cheek.
Every weapon in the squad is aimed at the five figures standing in the killing zone, and every trigger is waiting for the same signal, and the signal has not come. The lead figure reaches into a pocket or a pouch and produces a light. A flashlight. Small, weak, the beam yellow and diffuse. The figure turns and shines it at the person behind, and the light catches a face.
A child. The face in the beam is young. Not a man’s face. Not a teenager’s face. A child’s face — round, smooth, caught in the flashlight’s glow with an expression of concentration, the kind of face that belongs at a school desk or a dinner table and does not belong on a trail in the Central Highlands at three in the morning.
The beam swings further and catches the second figure, and this one is small too, and the objects they are carrying resolve, in the new light, into what they actually are: long-handled tools. Bamboo poles with wire loops at the end. Rat traps. The children are hunting rats in the paddies, the way children in the villages have done for generations, because rats eat the rice and someone has to catch them and the catching is done at night when the rats come out to feed.
Your hand is shaking. The clacker is in your fist and your hand is shaking, and the shake is not from cold. It is from the distance between what almost happened and what did not happen, and that distance is the width of a quarter-inch of trigger travel, measured in the flesh of five children who do not know they are standing between fourteen hundred steel balls aimed from two directions.
Reeves moves. He signals two men forward — Dominguez and the man from Bravo team nearest the junction — and they rise from their positions and cross the thirty meters in a low crouch, rifles up but fingers off the triggers. The children see them and freeze. The flashlight beam swings wildly.
A voice — high, thin, the voice of a child who has been caught doing something he was told not to do — speaks a burst of Vietnamese that you do not understand and do not need to. The tone is universal. It is the sound of being scared. Dominguez and the Bravo man gather the children into the ambush position. Five of them. The oldest cannot be more than twelve.
The youngest is perhaps eight, wearing shorts and a shirt that is too large, carrying a rat trap nearly as tall as he is. They sit where they are told to sit — behind the tree roots, knees drawn up, eyes wide — and the sounds they make are small: a sniffle, a whispered word, a quiet sob from the youngest that he is trying to suppress. You are still holding the clacker.
You look at it — dim, barely visible, just a shape in the dark. Then you look at the children, who are shapes too, but warm ones, breathing ones, shapes that would have ceased to exist if you had squeezed thirty seconds earlier. Reeves makes the call: stay in position. Moving the children back through the paddy would generate noise and motion that could compromise the site.
Staying puts the children at risk if a real contact occurs. Both options carry weight. He chooses the one that keeps the ambush intact, because the ambush is the mission and the mission does not suspend itself for near-misses. The children will stay until first light, and at first light someone will walk them back to their village and explain what happened to parents who will be grateful and furious in equal measure.
The youngest child has stopped crying. He sits with his knees pulled to his chest, his rat trap beside him on the ground, his face turned toward the dark the way all faces turn when the body wants comfort and the dark is all there is. The child beside him — a girl, you think, from the length of her hair — puts a hand on his shoulder without speaking.
The ambush resumes. The squad settles back into position. Weapons point outward. The scope scans. Everything returns to the arrangement it held before the crickets stopped, except that five children are now sitting behind the tree roots, and the weight of the clacker in your hand has changed. It weighs the same.
Three ounces of plastic and spring steel. But your hand remembers the almost. Before tonight, the squeeze was theoretical. Now it has a face. Several faces, small and round and caught in a flashlight beam. The space between almost and did is a quarter-inch wide, and you will carry that quarter-inch out of this paddy and into every room you enter for the rest of your life.
The gecko calls. The crickets have resumed. The night continues as if nothing happened, because to the night, nothing did. The mud has found your skin. It started at the knees, where your trousers pressed into the wet earth when you crawled forward to place the Claymore.
Then it spread — up through the fabric, across your thighs, into the waistband where your belt holds the fatigues against your stomach. Now, four hours in, the mud is everywhere. It coats your forearms from elbow to wrist. It has worked its way under your watch strap, a gritty paste between metal and skin. Your chest, pressed flat against the paddy dike since you settled into position, is a single plane of damp cloth and damp earth, and the boundary between you and the ground has become a negotiation rather than a line.
The rice paddy mud of the Central Highlands is not the mud you knew at home. It is finer, denser, the product of clay soil and centuries of flooding. When dry, it cracks into plates the color of old brick. When wet, it becomes a paste that grips fabric, skin, and metal with equal enthusiasm, filling every crease and fold until your body wears the landscape like a second uniform.
The smell is deep and organic — not rot, but fermentation, the slow chemistry of water and soil and rice roots and the waste of ten thousand frogs processing the night’s business in the shallows around you. No poncho. That rule was established before you left the wire and it has not softened with the hours.
Ponchos are too noisy — the slick nylon whispers against itself when you move, a sound that carries across water the way a match flame carries across a dark room. Ponchos also reflect light. On a night with any moon at all, the flat surface catches the glow and sends it back in a flash that is visible, through a scope, at distances that matter. So you lie in what you wore: jungle fatigues, cotton, loose-woven, soaking through.
No underwear beneath them — a practice adopted so universally that nobody discusses it anymore. Cotton underwear holds water. Bare skin under wet fatigues dries faster when the sun returns. The logic is sound. The sensation, at two in the morning in the highlands, is a chill that starts at the small of your back and radiates outward in waves, each one a little colder than the last, until your entire body is a container of damp cold wrapped in damp cloth pressed against damp earth.
Your muscles have begun their slow rebellion. The body is not designed for motionless horizontal hours on hard ground, and it registers its complaint through a language of cramps, aches, and numbness that escalates as the night progresses. Your left hip, the one pressed against the root you shifted to avoid at the start of the night, has gone from discomfort to a steady throbbing pain that pulses with your heartbeat.
Your neck, held at the angle required to sight along your rifle, has locked into a position that will require deliberate effort to change. Your right hand, closed around the clacker for so long that the tendons have molded to its shape, has lost the ability to fully open — the fingers will straighten when you tell them to, but the motion is stiff and grudging, as if the joints have forgotten how to do anything other than grip.
You cannot stretch. Stretching means extending a limb, and an extended limb moves grass, and moving grass produces sound. You cannot roll. Rolling shifts sixty pounds of gear and body across the earth with a muffled scraping that the night would carry. You cannot sit up. Sitting up raises your silhouette above the dike line and presents a shape that the dark can frame against the sky.
So you lie as you have been lying, and the cramps build, and the cold deepens, and the body’s request for relief is denied by the same authority that put it here: the mission, which does not negotiate with discomfort. The leech finds you at 0230. You feel it as a cool, wet pressure on the inside of your left wrist, just above the mud line where your sleeve has ridden up. Not a bite — leeches do not bite the way mosquitoes do. They attach.
A slow, firm adhesion, like a wet finger pressing against your skin and not lifting. The saliva contains something that numbs the contact point, so the pain you expect does not arrive. Instead, there is only the knowledge — gained from your first leech three weeks ago, when you peeled one off your ankle and watched the blood run freely for minutes after — that something is feeding on you and has been designed by evolution to do so without your noticing.
You let it feed. The alternative is reaching across your body with your right hand, finding the leech by touch, and removing it — a process that involves movement, sound, and the risk of losing grip on the clacker during the transfer. The leech will take what it takes. A few milliliters. Not enough to matter. The blood loss is trivial.
The psychological weight is not, but you have learned to separate the two, to let the body give what it gives while the mind stays where it needs to stay: on the trail, on the scope, on the killing zone that remains empty and dark and waiting. The children behind you have gone quiet. The youngest fell asleep an hour ago, curled against the tree root with his head on his folded arms, his breathing the slow, deep breathing of a child who has cried himself out and surrendered to exhaustion.
The girl sits beside him, awake, her eyes catching the faint light when she blinks. She watches the soldiers the way a cat watches a room — not with fear anymore, but with the steady attention of someone cataloging a situation she does not fully understand but intends to survive. Between cramps, in the spaces where the body rests between one complaint and the next, your mind drifts. It does this without permission.
You are thinking about a kitchen. Not a specific kitchen, not your mother’s or your girlfriend’s, but a composite kitchen assembled from every warm room you have ever eaten in — yellow light, the smell of something baking, a chair with a cushion, the sound of a radio playing low. The kitchen is not a memory.
It is a construction, a shelter the mind builds when the body cannot find one, and you visit it briefly, a few seconds at a time, before the discipline you have trained into yourself pulls you back to the paddy, the mud, the scope, the trail. The coffee you will drink tomorrow morning — the real one, the one the mess hall serves in metal cups that burn your fingers — exists somewhere ahead of you in time, separated from this moment by the hours remaining and the walk back and the debrief and the cleaning of weapons and the slow approach to the mess line where the smell of powdered eggs and burned toast and coffee,
actual coffee, will reach you twenty meters before you reach the counter. You can almost taste it. Almost is a dangerous word here. Almost is the word that took on a new weight at 0347 when the flashlight caught a child’s face. Almost is the word the war runs on — almost safe, almost home, almost over.
You stop thinking about the coffee because the almost attached to it leads to other almosts, and those lead to the girl in the photograph, and the girl in the photograph leads to a place in your chest that is warmer than the paddy and softer than the mud and entirely incompatible with the job your hands are doing. The cold tightens. Your jaw clenches. The shiver you will not permit sits in your spine like a coiled wire, vibrating at a frequency too low to produce motion but present enough that you feel it — a tremor running through the muscle fibers of your back, held in check by the same willpower that holds your hand
on the clacker and your eyes on the trail. The mud holds you. The leech feeds. The child sleeps. The night presses down with a weight that is not gravity but something older — the weight of dark hours in a place that was not built for you, where the ground takes your warmth and the air takes your moisture and the insects take your blood and the only thing you contribute to the exchange is your presence, your attention, and the stubborn, unreasonable decision to remain exactly where you are until someone tells you to move. The watch says 0255. Five hours down. Three to go.
The frogs are still singing. So are you. Differently, and in silence, but singing all the same. The crickets stop again at 0438. This time the silence arrives differently. Not a patch. A wave. It rolls across the southern treeline like a curtain being drawn, moving east to west in a sweep that covers two hundred meters of frontage in less than ten seconds. The frogs follow.
Their chorus thins, breaks apart, and drops to scattered individuals calling into a quiet that is answering them with nothing. The gecko has not called in four minutes. You know before you look. The body knows. Something in the wiring between your ears and your spine has processed the sound environment and delivered a verdict before the scope reaches your eye, and the verdict is simple: this is not children. The scope finds them at the treeline.
Shapes again, but different shapes. These move lower, closer to the ground, with a fluidity that suggests training rather than wandering. They do not bunch. The intervals between them are even — five meters, perhaps six — maintained with the unconscious precision of men who have walked in formation so many times that spacing has become automatic.
They carry their loads at chest height, angular objects held close to the body, and they move without flashlights, without sound, without any of the small carelessnesses that marked the children two hours ago. Six of them. Filing along the secondary trail toward the junction. The spacing tells you what they are before anything else does.
These figures move with tactical intervals — trained distances maintained in darkness without verbal correction. North Vietnamese Army regulars. NVA. They have walked south on a journey that may have started weeks ago on the Ho Chi Minh Trail, the network of roads and footpaths winding through Laos and Cambodia, delivering men and materiel from North to South.
By 1969, the Trail is not a single path but a system — truck routes, bicycle paths through mountains, foot trails through triple canopy. These six are the end of that pipeline. Whatever they carry, they carry it on foot, at night, on trails like this one. The intervals say so. What you cannot know is what the walk felt like from the other side. They know the ambushes exist.
Every trail in the highlands is a potential killing zone, and the men who walk them have learned the same arithmetic you learned: the ground is not neutral. They move without light because light draws fire. They maintain intervals because a cluster is a single target. They listen for the same crickets, reading the same silences.
Some of them have walked trails where the man ahead stepped on something and stopped walking. They carry that knowledge in their legs the way you carry it in yours. The body’s fear speaks the same language in both directions. Your thumb finds the safety bail on the clacker. It is already open. It has been open for hours.
The squeeze is right there, waiting, the quarter-inch of travel between the world as it is and the world as it will be in one-fifteenth of a second. Reeves sees them through the scope. His hand finds Kowalski’s arm. A whispered syllable — the call sign, the grid, the request. Kowalski’s lips move against the handset.
Somewhere at the firebase, the fire direction center receives coordinates and begins the calculations that will, if requested, drop high-explosive rounds into this paddy with a margin of error measured in meters. The artillery is a held breath. It waits for the word. The children. The thought arrives with a cold clarity that cuts through everything else. The children are behind you, fifteen meters back, behind the tree roots.
If the Claymores fire forward and the squad fires forward, the back-blast is concussion and noise but not steel. The children are behind the arc. They should be safe. Should is another word that has acquired new weight tonight. The figures reach the junction. They move in a file that threads between the two Claymore positions, entering the killing zone from the southeast corner the way a needle enters fabric — with direction, with purpose, with no awareness of what is waiting on the other side of the cloth. Reeves squeezes your arm. Once. Hard.
You squeeze the clacker. The world breaks open. The Claymore fires with a sound that is not an explosion but a crack — a flat, hard, concussive snap that compresses the air around you and punches your eardrums inward. A sheet of light. White.
Not orange, not yellow, but white, the color of seven hundred steel balls leaving the face of the mine at four thousand feet per second and tearing through the air in a sixty-degree arc that covers the trail junction like a wall of metal appearing from nothing. The second Claymore fires a half-beat later — Dominguez’s, angled from the right — and the two arcs cross in the center of the killing zone in a convergence that lasts less than a heartbeat.
Then the M-60 opens. Not a rhythmic chatter but a sustained ripping, a tearing of the air that starts and does not stop. Red tracers streak across the paddy in flat lines, every fifth round visible. The M16s join — yours among them, the rifle kicking against your shoulder in short bursts, the muzzle flash strobing your vision into frozen frames: trail, smoke, flash, dark.
The noise is total. It fills every space in your head and pushes everything else out — thought, fear, the name of the man beside you, the children behind you. There is only the rifle and the trigger and the target area and the mechanical process of firing, adjusting, firing that your training installed in the part of your brain that operates below language.
It lasts eleven seconds. Eleven seconds. The duration of a long breath. The time it takes to tie a boot. The span between the crack of the first Claymore and the moment Reeves shouts the ceasefire and the M-60 stops and the M16s stop and the last echo rolls across the paddy and flattens against the far treeline and dies. The silence that follows is not silence.
It is the negative impression of the noise — a ringing, a high-frequency whine that lives inside your ears and will live there for hours, layered over the sounds that begin to return: your own breathing, fast and ragged. The tinkling of spent brass settling on the ground around your position. The drip of water disturbed by concussion, falling from grass blades back into the paddy.
Smoke hangs over the killing zone. The Claymore propellant produces a white haze that drifts in the still air, giving the junction the look of a stage after the curtain has fallen. Through the smoke, shapes on the ground. Motionless. The scope confirms what the eyes suspect: the shapes are not moving. Kowalski is on the radio.
His voice has changed — harder, the consonants sharp. He reads the grid, the count, the disposition. Reeves answers through Kowalski: six observed, Claymores initiated at 0441, fire ceased at 0441 plus eleven seconds, no friendly casualties. Request permission to remain in position until first light. Permission granted. Stay in place. First light is forty minutes away.
You lower the rifle. The barrel is warm against your forearm. The brass casings around your position gleam faintly in the dark, small cylinders of spent metal scattered across the mud like seeds. Your hands are shaking. Not the controlled tremor of the cold hours — a different shaking, deeper, originating in your forearms and spreading through your fingers.
The adrenaline is in your blood now, a chemical tide that rose in the eleven seconds and has nowhere to go. Behind you, a child is crying. Not the quiet sniffle of before. A high, broken sound, the sound of a child woken by the loudest noise of his life and unable to process what produced it. The girl has her arms around the youngest.
She holds him against her chest and rocks, and the rocking produces a small creaking sound against the tree root, and the sound is so ordinary, so completely a sound from a world that is not this one, that it sits in the air beside the smell of burned propellant and the ringing in your ears and refuses to belong to either place. Dominguez is changing his magazine.
Press the release, the empty drops, the fresh one slides in, the bolt goes forward. He does not look at you. You do not look at him. The looking will come later, over coffee, when the words — if they come — will be short and factual and insufficient. The smoke thins. The paddy settles. The ringing fades enough to hear the frogs resuming, cautiously, one voice at a time, testing the quiet the way a swimmer tests cold water — one toe, then another, then the commitment. Forty minutes until first light.
You lie in the mud, rifle across your arms, and wait for the sun to show you what the dark has hidden. First light in the Central Highlands is not a color. It is a process. The darkness does not lift. It thins. Grey seeps into the black the way water seeps into fabric — slowly, from the edges, until the shapes that the night erased begin to reassemble themselves from the ground up.
The paddy dikes appear first, dark lines against slightly less dark water. Then the tree at your position, its trunk solidifying from shadow into bark. Then the far treeline, the scrub, the trail. The killing zone resolves last. Reeves takes two men forward. They move in a low crouch, weapons up, crossing the thirty meters of open ground between the ambush line and the junction in a pattern that keeps one man covering while the other advances.
The smoke from the Claymores has settled to a thin haze at ground level, and the smell is still present — a sharp, chemical tang that mixes with the paddy mud and the morning dampness to produce something your nose files under a category it did not have before this year. You do not go forward.
Your position is rear security now, watching the treeline for follow-up, for reinforcement. Watkins scans the far bank with the scope, but the light is growing and the naked eye is taking over. The green world gives way to grey, then brown, and the colors of dawn reassert themselves across a landscape that existed for ten hours only as sound and shape and temperature.
Reeves radios the assessment. His voice is flat. Not cold — flat. The voice of a man delivering information that is factual, numerical, and stripped of everything that is not useful to the person receiving it. Six personnel. The equipment scattered around them confirms what the spacing suggested in the dark: NVA regulars, not local guerrillas.
Three carry AK-47s, the Soviet-designed rifles that half the world’s armies use and that make a sound your ears learned to distinguish from an M16 in your first week in-country. Two carry canvas packs heavy with rifle ammunition — not for their own weapons but for a unit waiting somewhere in the highlands, a unit that will now wait longer.
The sixth carries a satchel with papers inside, damp but legible, and Reeves handles it carefully because documents are intelligence and intelligence is the one thing this war produces that someone at a desk can use. The papers will travel up the chain — squad to company to battalion to brigade — and somewhere an analyst will plot the route, the unit designation, the supply pattern, and add one more thread to the map of how the enemy moves through this country in the dark. Whether that thread changes anything is above your rank and beyond your night.
The Company CP logs the report and confirms extraction: the squad will walk back under its own power, standard return route, different from the route out. The children leave first. Dominguez walks them to the edge of the paddy where the stream bed begins, and from there a path leads south toward the nearest village.
The oldest boy — the one with the flashlight — walks with a stiffness that suggests he has not fully processed the night but has decided, in the way children decide things, to manage it later. The girl holds the youngest’s hand. She does not look back. The youngest carries his rat trap, retrieved from where he left it behind the tree root, and the trap swings beside his leg as he walks, catching the early light on its wire loop, a small bright arc moving through the morning air.
They will reach the village within the hour. Someone will speak to the parents. The children will grow up. They may remember this night. They may not. The youngest is young enough that the memory might blur into the general texture of a childhood lived in a country at war, where strange things happen in the dark and the morning always comes regardless.
The squad assembles for the return. Weapons checked. Claymore wire retrieved — every foot of it, every blasting cap, every component that could be repurposed. The spent brass goes into a pocket. Nothing is left behind. A lessons-learned report from the 4th Infantry is specific: even spent casings have been recovered and incorporated into enemy ordnance.
You carry your garbage because your garbage is ammunition for the next ambush. Reeves leads. You are not on point for the return. The point position rotates, and the man who takes it is fresh to the front, his senses sharp from a night of rear-security watch. You fall into the middle of the file, and the position feels different — less exposed, more sheltered.
The return route follows a contour line along the base of a low hill, staying off the trail, moving through scrub and grass that is wet with morning dew. The dew soaks your already-wet fatigues and adds a fresh layer of cold to the dried sweat and paddy mud. You are a walking composite of the night’s surfaces — mud, water, insect repellent, sweat, the chemical residue of Claymore propellant that clings to your hands and forearms, and now dew, the cleanest thing to touch your skin in twelve hours.
It runs down your face in cool lines and you do not wipe it away. The walk takes longer than the walk out. The indirect route adds distance, and Reeves sets the pace at a deliberate half-speed that accounts for fatigue, for packs that feel heavier than they did at dusk, for the diminished alertness of men who have been awake and motionless and adrenaline-soaked for ten consecutive hours.
Your hip aches where the root pressed. Your neck is stiff. Your right hand opens and closes with a reluctance that suggests the tendons have memorized a shape they do not wish to surrender. The birds are calling. Morning birds, not night birds. Their sounds are sharper, more defined, with the bright edges that come from throats designed to carry across open air rather than through canopy.
A rooster crows somewhere to the south — a village sound, domestic, so startlingly normal that several men in the file look toward it as if the sound itself were visible. The rooster does not know what happened in the paddy four hours ago. The rooster is announcing dawn the way it announces every dawn, with the self-importance of a creature that believes the sun rises because it asked. The treeline opens.
Through the thinning canopy, you can see the perimeter wire of the base, the bunker line, the shapes of hooches beyond. The sight produces a feeling that is not relief exactly — more like a threshold, a line that changes what is required of you. Behind the wire, you can move your hands, turn your head, speak above a whisper, scratch the places that have been itching for hours.
The base is waking. Generators hum. A jeep moves along the perimeter road, its headlights still on against the grey dawn. Smoke rises from the mess hall chimney. The smell reaches you before the wire does — cooking grease, bread, the burnt-sugar scent of coffee boiling in a metal urn. The smell enters your nose and travels directly to the part of your brain that handles hunger, and the hunger, suppressed for twelve hours by adrenaline and discipline, arrives all at once with a force that makes your stomach contract. You pass through the wire. The concertina parts
at the patrol gap, and the scrub gives way to beaten earth, and your boots find the familiar gravel of the path between the hooches. The sound of boots on gravel. You did not know you missed it until you heard it again. Reeves calls the squad to a halt near the arms room. Nine men stand in a loose group, packs sagging, weapons pointing at the ground.
Nobody speaks for a moment. The moment stretches. Then the M-60 gunner from Arkansas clears his throat and says, quietly, that he could eat a horse, and someone else says something about which horse, and the small, insufficient words do what small words do: they bridge the gap between where you were and where you are, one ordinary sentence at a time.
The debrief will come. The cleaning of weapons will come. The shower, the food, the bunk. You unsling your pack. The straps leave grooves in your shoulders that will take an hour to fade. The rifle goes to your left hand. Your right hand opens fully for the first time in ten hours, the fingers straightening with a slow, aching reluctance.
The clacker is still in your pocket. You will turn it in at the arms room. You will not think about it again today. You will think about it again tonight. The arms room smells like gun oil and old wood. You hand in the Claymore gear — the clacker, the wire spool, the empty bandolier — and the supply sergeant checks each item against a list on a clipboard, making small marks with a pencil that needs sharpening.
The pencil scratches across the paper. A quiet sound. A sound that belongs to offices and classrooms, not to the room adjacent to a rack of rifles, but here it is, doing its small clerical work while the morning builds outside. Your rifle goes onto the cleaning bench. The bolt comes back with a pull that is stiffer than usual — residue from the night’s firing, carbon and copper fouling in the chamber. You strip the weapon by feel.
The upper receiver lifts free. The bolt carrier slides out, dark with carbon, trailing the smell of burned powder. You lay the parts on a rag and begin the work with a brush and a bottle of solvent that stings the cuts on your hands — the thin red lines from the elephant grass, reopened by the night’s crawling, now raw enough to notice. The cleaning takes twenty minutes.
It is not hurried. The motions are repetitive, circular, the kind of work that occupies the hands while the mind does something else. The brush goes in, comes out. The patch follows. Black residue on the first pass, grey on the second, white on the third. The bore shines when you hold it to the light from the window.
The bolt carrier gets the same treatment — brush, solvent, rag — until the metal is clean and faintly bright and the action moves with the smooth resistance of parts that fit together the way they were designed to. Around you, the squad is doing the same thing. Nine men on a bench, nine rifles in pieces, the click and scrape of cleaning rods and the soft conversation that begins, tentatively, the way birds begin after a storm.
Someone mentions breakfast. Someone mentions a letter he needs to write. The M-60 gunner is field-stripping the feed tray with the unhurried patience of a man who has cleaned this weapon so many times that his hands could do it while the rest of him sleeps. Nobody talks about the paddy. Not yet.
The paddy is still too close, still too present in the residue on the bolt and the mud on the fatigues and the ringing that has faded to a faint, persistent hum behind every other sound. The question that arrives while your hands work the cleaning rod: did it matter? Not tonight specifically — tonight produced a result, a satchel of documents traveling up the chain. But the patrols themselves.
The hundreds that go out every night, squads lying in mud at trail junctions. Military Assistance Command tracks the numbers: contacts made, supplies intercepted, trails denied. The ambush program is credited with disrupting supply routes, forcing the VC to move in smaller groups. Some commanders call it the most effective use of infantry in this war. Others see something different — a nightly ritual that produces statistics without changing the map, that trades American sleep for a body count Washington can print on a briefing slide.
The argument will outlast the war. It will fill books written by men who were never in a rice paddy. Your hands do not care about the argument. Your hands care about the carbon in the bolt carrier. The argument belongs to people who were not here. The mess hall is a corrugated-metal building with screen windows and a concrete floor. The line moves slowly. Metal trays slide along a rail.
A cook whose name you have never learned ladles eggs from a pan — powdered eggs, reconstituted, cooked to a texture that is not scrambled and not fried but something in between that has its own category. Toast. Two slices, browned unevenly, the edges dark where the industrial toaster runs hot. A spoonful of something that might be hash browns. And coffee.
The coffee comes from a metal urn the size of a fire hydrant, and it has been boiling since before dawn, and it is not good coffee. It is bitter and dark and slightly burnt, and the powdered cream you stir into it dissolves in reluctant clumps that orbit the surface before surrendering.
You drink it with both hands around the cup because the cup is warm and your hands are still cold from the paddy, and the warmth travels from the ceramic through your palms and into your wrists and up your forearms. The heat is the first comfort of the day, and you hold it the way a man holds a small fire — close, careful, grateful for something that costs nothing and gives everything.
The eggs taste like nothing. You eat them anyway. Your body wants calories the way a machine wants fuel — without preference, without pleasure, just the mechanical demand of a system that has been running on adrenaline for twelve hours and needs something solid to replace it. The toast is better.
It has texture, and texture is a sensation the mouth appreciates after a night of clenched jaws and canteen water. You eat slowly, not because you are savoring the meal but because your stomach, contracted by hours of tension, needs time to remember how to accept food. Kowalski sits across from you. He eats with his left hand. His right hand rests on the table, palm down, fingers slightly curled, and you recognize the shape — it is the shape of a hand that spent the night gripping a radio handset, the tendons still holding the ghost of the object they carried. He sees you looking and flexes the fingers, once,
a small gesture of acknowledgment. Neither of you speaks. The silence between you is not empty. It is full of the things the night contained, packed tight, and words would only disturb the packing. Through the screen window, the base is in full morning. Sunlight crosses the gravel paths in long, warm stripes.
A helicopter lifts from the pad to the north, its rotors catching the light and spinning it into a bright disk that rises above the hooches and tilts east. The sound reaches you through the screens — the familiar chop, the whine of the turbine — and the sound is neutral now, neither threatening nor comforting. Just the sound of a machine doing what machines do. The fan in the mess hall turns overhead.
It does not click. A different fan, a different balance. The blades push the warm air downward in lazy currents that lift the edges of napkins and carry the smell of coffee across the room. You sit beneath it and let the air move over you, and the motion is a kindness — not a large one, not the kind you would mention, but a kindness all the same.
The air moves, and you are still, and after ten hours of being still because you had to be, being still because you choose to be is a different experience entirely. The tray empties. The coffee cup empties. You refill the cup once, because you can. Because the urn is there and the coffee is there and nobody is timing your breakfast or counting your cups or waiting for you to finish so the next man can eat. The second cup is the luxury. The first was need.
The second is choice, and choice has been absent from your night, and its return is worth a cup of burned coffee that you drink slowly, in the mess hall, under the fan, while the morning grows warmer outside and the base hums its steady sixty-cycle hum around you. The shower is a wooden stall behind the hooch row.
A canvas bag hangs from a crossbar, filled from a water trailer that comes around at seven. The water is not hot. It is not cold. It is the temperature of the air, which is warm now, and the warmth is enough. You pull the chain and the water falls. It runs over your head and down your shoulders and carries the night with it — mud, sweat, repellent, the fine grit of dried paddy clay. The water turns brown around your boots.
You watch it pool and drain through the slats of the wooden floor, and the brown is the color of the place you were, and the clear water replacing it is the color of the place you are. The transition happens on your skin before it happens in your mind. The body cleans faster than the memory. Soap. A bar, army-issue, the texture of pumice and the smell of nothing in particular.
You scrub your arms where the grass left its marks. The lines sting under the soap. You scrub your wrist where the leech fed, and the spot is a small purple bruise, painless now, already fading. You scrub your hands, working the soap between your fingers, loosening the carbon residue from the rifle and the chemical film from the Claymore wire, until your hands are your hands again — clean, open, capable of holding something other than a weapon. The water runs out before you are ready for it to.
The bag empties in stages — a full stream, then a trickle, then drops that fall at intervals long enough to count. You stand under the last drops and let them land on the back of your neck, each one a small, cool point that slides down your spine. Then the drops stop and the stall is quiet and the only sound is water draining through wood. Clean fatigues from the footlocker.
They smell like laundry soap and canvas, a smell so plainly domestic it feels borrowed from another life. The fabric is dry against your skin. Dry fabric after twelve hours of wet is a sensation that registers as more than comfort. It is a restoration. The body, wrapped in clean cotton, begins to believe that the night is over. The hooch is dim.
Someone has closed the shutters against the morning sun, and the light inside is brown and soft. Your bunk waits. The cot, the mosquito net bunched at the head, the thin pillow that smells of your own hair and the canvas beneath it. The blanket is army wool, olive drab, scratchy at the collar but warm in the way that only wool can be warm — a dry, insulating heat that holds itself close to the body.
You sit on the cot. The canvas sags under you with a familiar creak. Your boots are off now — finally, truly off, the laces loose, the boots standing beside the bunk like two small sentries. Your feet are pale and wrinkled, the skin soft from hours of immersion. The air touches them and the sensation is strange. Cool. Open.
Your toes spread on the plywood floor and the spreading is a small freedom, the kind that does not announce itself but registers in the joints. The hooch is not quiet. Men move in the far end, voices low, a footlocker opening and closing. Someone is writing a letter, the pen scratching in the slow rhythm of a man choosing his words. Through the shutters, the base sounds filter in — a truck engine, a voice calling across the gravel, a helicopter passing over at altitude.
The sounds are muffled by the walls and the shutters and the brown light, and the muffling turns them into background, a soft weave of noise that cushions rather than intrudes. You lie back. The pillow takes the weight of your head and the cot takes the weight of your body and for a moment, the relief is so complete it borders on pain — the muscles releasing, the spine decompressing, the shoulders dropping from the position they have held since you picked up the pack fourteen hours ago.
The blanket comes up to your chest. The wool presses against your arms. The weight of it is slight, barely there, but the body reads it as shelter and responds accordingly. The fan turns above you. This one clicks. The same click, the same blade, the same small imperfection that you heard before you left.
The click is a metronome. It measures time in equal intervals, and the intervals are gentle, and the gentleness is the fan’s only contribution, and it is enough. Your eyes close. They do not close because you tell them to.
They close because the weight of the lids has become greater than the effort of holding them open, and the body, given permission at last, is making its own decisions. Behind the lids, the dark is warm. Not the dark of the paddy — that dark was cold and large and full of sounds that meant danger. This dark is small and close and the sounds it contains are safe. The click of the fan. The scratch of the pen.
The muffled hum of the base doing what the base does when you are not watching. Your breathing changes. Longer on the exhale. Slower on the intake. The rhythm finds itself without instruction, settling into the pattern that comes before sleep, the pattern that the body knows better than the mind and executes with a practiced ease that no amount of adrenaline can permanently disrupt.
The girl in the photograph. She is in the helmet liner, on the footlocker, three feet from your head. You do not need to see her. You know the photograph — the angle of her smile, the way her hair falls across one shoulder, the handwriting on the back that says something you have read so many times the words have worn smooth. She is there. The photograph is there.
The distance between the cot and the footlocker is three feet. The distance between the cot and her is twelve thousand miles. Both measurements are accurate. Neither one captures the space. The pen stops scratching. The letter-writer has finished or paused. The hooch settles into a quiet that is layered — breathing, fan, base hum — and the layers are soft, and the softness is the point.
Sleep comes the way the rain comes in the highlands. Not all at once. In soft advances. Your hands are open on the blanket. The fingers rest. The grip that held the clacker for ten hours has loosened, and the tendons lie flat, and the palms face the ceiling in a posture the body chooses when it has nothing left to hold. The fan clicks. The air moves.
A sound from outside — a bird, close to the hooch, calling twice and then stopping. The call is bright and clean. A daytime bird. A bird that does not know the name of the war or the name of the base or the name of the man lying three feet below the shuttered window. It calls because the morning is warm and the air is good and calling is what birds do. You hear it the way you hear rain on a roof.
Present but distant. Part of the room and apart from it. The cot holds you. The wool holds you. The brown light holds you. Each layer is thin. Together they are enough. Somewhere on the base, a radio is playing. The music comes through two walls and a shutter, and by the time it reaches your ears it has lost its edges. The melody is there. The words are not.
Just a voice, soft and far away, singing something you might know. The song blurs at the margins. It becomes a hum. Your breathing slows again. The exhale carries the last of the night’s tension. The inhale brings the smell of laundry soap and wool and the warm wood of the hooch. Simple smells. Safe smells. The kind that belong to rooms where nothing is asked of you.
The gecko is quiet now. It is morning and the gecko sleeps in the crook of a tree somewhere in the treeline, grey-blue and still, its throat at rest. The barbet is quiet too. The frogs have settled into the mud at the bottom of the paddy, their songs finished. The insects have handed the air back to the birds. The night shift is over for everyone.
The children are home. You do not know this, but they are. The oldest boy is sitting in a doorway, eating rice from a bowl. The girl is beside her mother. The youngest has already forgotten the soldiers in the scrub, or begun to forget, which is the same thing when you are eight. The rat trap leans against a wall in the shade.
By tonight it will be in the paddy again. By tonight you may be too. But that is tonight. Tonight is far away. Tonight lives on the other side of a sleep that has not yet arrived but is arriving now, in slow advances, the way the rain comes. The fan clicks. Your eyes are closed. The light behind your lids is soft and brown. A truck passes on the gravel road.
The tires make a sound like slow breathing. It fades. The letter-writer in the far bunk has put down his pen. His breathing has joined the pattern of the room — long, steady, the kind that means he is no longer choosing to breathe but letting his body do it. Kowalski is asleep two bunks down. The M-60 gunner is asleep near the door.
Dominguez is somewhere in the hooch, breathing the same brown air, under the same turning fan. The base hums. It will hum all day. The generators will run and the helicopters will cross the sky and the mess hall will serve lunch and dinner and the gravel paths will carry boots back and forth between the hooches and the wire. All of it will happen without you. All of it will wait. The pillow is warm where your head has rested.
The blanket is warm where your chest has pressed against it. The warmth is yours. You made it. From nothing but a body and a wool blanket and a canvas cot, you made this small circle of heat. It is the oldest comfort. The simplest one. The music has stopped. Or you have stopped hearing it. The difference does not matter.
What remains is the fan, the breathing, the hum. Three sounds. Steady. Close. Enough. Your hand moves once on the blanket. A small motion. The fingers curl, then open, then rest. The hand is done. The night is done. The patrol is filed away in the place where patrols go — not forgotten, not resolved, just stored.
Somewhere between the girl in the photograph and the child in the paddy and the smell of coffee and the sound of brass hitting mud. Stored. Carried. Set down for now. The rain-that-is-sleep reaches you. It is warm. It asks nothing. The fan clicks. The brown light holds. Close your eyes. Sleep tight.