Refusal to Bury
On the sunny afternoon of 8 August 1970, a courier dropped the daily casualty report on my desk. The day prior, Charlie Company had been investigating a suspicious area in the bush. Capt. Martinez, who inclined toward the unusual, had set up an LP (listening post) beyond the wire to detect anyone sneaking around. An LP was the least popular assignment and most unsettling, because the enemy owned the night. Two of the newest men in the unit, an FNG (fucking new guy) and SP4 Pondextuer Eugene Williams, a vet from The Big Red One, were put out there in no man’s land. They were huddled around their radio like tethered goats, listening to night noises for tell-tale signs, when a Viet Cong snuck up and planted a mine. The blast took Williams' head and critically wounded his companion. Doc Gerrits went out to check. Williams was done for, so he treated the wounded man. Taking care of your buddies is utmost, but Williams’ friends were shaky because of r...