He yearned for the strength to throw it out but knew he didn’t have it. He raised the bottle to his lips, wise with the knowledge that he was about to die, and brought the bottle—
You think everything is about you.
Bob stopped. He considered something so fundamental he’d not seen it before, but suddenly it seemed as big as a mountain: his assumption that Solaratov came to Vietnam to kill him and had returned to Idaho to kill him.
But suppose it wasn’t about him?
What could it be about, then?
He tried to think.
The sniper had a semiauto.
He could fire twice, fast.
He had to take them both to make sure of hitting one.
But suppose I wasn’t the one he had to hit.
Well, who else was there?
Only Donny.
Could it be about … Donny?
CHAPTER THIRTY-FIVE
He awoke early, without a hangover, because he had not been drunk. He looked at his watch and saw that it was eight here, which meant it was eleven in the East.
He picked up the phone, then called Henderson Hall, United States Marine Corps Headquarters, Arlington, Virginia. He asked to be connected to the Command Sergeant Major of the Corps, got an office and a young buck sergeant, and eventually got through to the great man himself, with whom he’d served a tour in Vietnam in sixty-five and run into a few odd, friendly times over the years.
“Bob Lee, you son of a bitch.”
“Howdy, Vern. They ain’t kicked you out yet?”
“Tried many a time. It’s them pictures I got of a general and his goat.”
“Those’ll git a man a long way.”
“In Washington, they’ll git you all the way.”
The two old sergeants laughed.
“So anyhow, Bob Lee, what you got cooking? You ain’t written a book yet?”
“Not yet. Maybe one of these years. Look, I need a favor. You’re the only man that could do it.”
“So? Name it.”
“I’m flying to DC this afternoon. I need to look at some paperwork. It would be the service jacket of my spotter, a kid that got killed in May 1972.”
“What was his name?”
“Fenn, Donny. Lance corporal, formerly corporal. I have to see what happened to him over his career.”
“What for? What’re you looking for?”
“Hell, I don’t know. I got something to check out involving him. What it is, I don’t know. It’s come up, though.”
“Didn’t you end up marrying his widow?”
“I did, yeah. A terrific lady. We’re sort of on the outs now.”
“Well, I hope you get it straightened out. This may take me a day or so. Or maybe not. I can probably get it, if not from here, from our archives, out in Virginia.”
“Real fine, Sergeant Major. I appreciate it much.”
“You call me when you get in.”
“I will.”
Bob hung up, hesitated, thought about the booze he did not drink and then dialed the Boise General Hospital and eventually was connected to his wife’s room.
“Hi,” he said. “It’s me. How are you? Did I wake you?”
“No, no. I’m fine. Sally took Nikki to school. There’s nobody around. How are you?”
“Oh, fine. I wish you’d reconsider.”
“I can’t.”
He was silent for a while.
“All right,” he finally said, “just think about it.”
“All right.”
“Now I have something else to ask.”
“What?”
“I need your help. This last little thing. Just a question or two. Something you would know that I don’t.”
“What?”
“It’s about Donny.”
“Oh, God, Bob.”
“I think this may have something to do with Donny. I’m not sure, it’s just a possibility. I have to check it out.”
“Please. You know how I hate to go back there. I’m over that now. It took a long time.”
“It’s a nothing question. A Marine question, that’s all.”
“Bob.”
“Please.”
She sighed and said nothing.
“Why was he sent to Vietnam? He had less than thirteen months to serve. But he had just lost his rating. He was a full corporal and he showed up in ’Nam just a lance corporal. So he had to be sent there for punitive reasons. They did that in those days.”
“It was punitive.”
“I thought it was. But that doesn’t sound like Donny.”
“I only caught bits and pieces of it. I was only there at the end. It was some crisis. They wanted him to spy on some other Marines who they thought were slipping information to the peace marchers. There was this big screwup at a demonstration, a girl got killed, it was a mess. He was ordered to spy on these other boys and he got to know them, but in the end, he wouldn’t. He refused. They told him they’d ship him to Vietnam, and he said, Go ahead, ship me to Vietnam. So they did. Then he met you, became a hero and got killed on his last day. You didn’t know that?”
“I knew there was something. I just didn’t know what.”
“Is that a help?”
“Yes, it is. Do you know who sent him?”
“No. Or if I did, I forgot. It was so long ago.”
“Okay. I’m going back to DC.”
“What? Bob—”
“I’ll only be gone a few days. I’m flying out there. I’ve got to find out what happened to Donny. You listen to Sally; you be careful. I’ll call you in a few days.”
“Oh, Bob—”
“I’ve got some money, some cash. Don’t worry.”
“Don’t get in trouble.”
“I’m not getting in any trouble. I promise. I’ll call you soon.”
There it was: WES PAC.
He remembered the first time he had seen it, that magic, frightening phrase, when the orders came through for that first tour in 1965: WES PAC. Western Pacific, which was Marine for Vietnam. He remembered sitting outside the company office at Camp Lejeune, North Carolina, and thinking, Oh, brother, I am in the shit.
“That’s it,” said the sergeant major’s aide.
“That’s it,” said Bob.
He sat in the anteroom in Henderson Hall, with the tall, thin young man with hair so short it hardly existed and movements so crisp they seemed freshly dry-cleaned.
“We got it this morning from Naval Records Storage Facility, Annandale. Sergeant Major used lots of smoke. He served with the CO’s chief petty officer on the old Iowa City.”
“You’ll tell him I appreciate it.”
“Yes, sir. I’m sniper-rated, by the way. Great school, out at Quantico. They still talk about you. Understand you fought a hell of a fight at Kham Duc.”
“Long time ago, son. I can hardly remember it.”
“I heard of it a hundred times,” said the young sergeant. “I won’t ever forget it.”
“Well, son, that’s kind of you.”
“I’ll be in my office next door. You let me know if you need anything else.”
“Thank you, son.”
The jacket was thick, all that remained of FENN, DONNY J.’s almost, but not quite four years in the Marine Corps. It was full of various orders, records of his first tour in the Nam with a line unit, his Bronze Star citation, his Silver Star nomination for Kham Duc, travel vouchers, shot records, medical reports, evaluations going back to Parris Island in the far-off land of 1968 when he enlisted, GCT results, the paper trail any military career, good, bad or indifferent, inevitably accumulates over the passage of time. There was even a copy of the Death in Battle report, filled out by the long-dead Captain Feamster, who only survived Donny a few weeks until the sappers took out Dodge City. But this one sheet, now faded and fragile, was the one that mattered; this was the one that sent him to the Nam.
HEADQUARTERS, USMC, 1C-MLT: 111