And God leaned down and said, ‘Boom’
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DAVID SILVA
The first of two parts.
Angel and I had just moved from Santa Ana to Costa Mesa when our
relationship began to fall apart.
It was one of those frustratingly mysterious relationship dilemmas
in which neither of us could quite figure out what was going wrong.
But whatever it was, it was serious, because it kept us so on edge
that everything -- bills, car problems, my breathing -- had the
potential for starting a major argument. We were arguing so much that
we eventually decided to just skip the arguing part and be generally
mad at each other at any given time.
And just when it seemed like things couldn’t get any more
uncomfortable, my annual summer training with the National Guard came
up. I had been so preoccupied with my troubles with Angel that I had
forgotten I was due for a drill. Then I flipped the calendar early
one evening, saw 2 1/2 rows of big red Xs across the month of June,
and realized that I had to show up for formation in an hour.
“Well,” I said, turning to Angel. “Bye.”
And I grabbed my duffel bag in the closet and left.
The drive from L.A. to Fort Hunter Liggett in Central California
is long by any standards, but particularly so when you’re riding in a
bus of 50 extremely grouchy National Guardsmen. Almost everyone was
feeling put out over having to leave their “real” lives behind for 2
1/2 weeks of dusty tents and Army food.
The only one among us who seemed to be having the time of his life
was my squad leader, a ferociously jolly pit bull of a human being
named Sgt. Stump. Stump was 6-foot-6, 350 pounds and had one of the
most massive necks I’d ever seen. He was the kind of guy you wanted
next to you in combat because if he were shot in the head, it would
take his body an hour to figure it out.
It was my misfortune to be seated next to him the entire trip.
“LOOK at Silva!” Stumps said, his voice booming at me like a
megaphone in a walk-in freezer. “Actin’ like we’re goin’ to the NAM
or somethin’! Silva’s gonna have some FUN! Eighteen days of FREE
meals and BLUE skies! LORD, Silva’s gonna feel GOOD!”
Stump also had a disturbing habit of addressing people in the
third person. For some six hours, Silva was a captive audience as
Stump boomed on and on about two things he simply couldn’t get enough
of: drinking and fighting. As such, his singularly favorite activity
was the barroom brawl.
“So I tell this clown ... heh heh, Silva’s gonna like this ... I
tell him, ‘What you gonna do with that pool stick? I KNOW you can’t
shoot pool!’ Heh heh ... .”
I used to wonder how a drinking, brawling loudmouth like Stump
could have managed to get three stripes on his shoulder. Then I found
out he had been in the National Guard for 15 years, and it began to
make sense to me. I understand my old Guard unit takes itself a lot
more seriously now, but back then, it was standing proof to Woody
Allen’s theory that 80% of success in life is just showing up.
Nearly all my officers and noncommissioned officers believed that
if they just showed up and called as little attention to themselves
as possible, time and bureaucratic ambivalence would steadily push
them up through the ranks. And since the fastest way to call unwanted
attention to yourself was to have someone under your command get
injured or killed, my unit’s commanders spent 49 1/2 weeks out of the
year instructing their troops to do as little as possible. I became
quite the solitaire player in the Guard.
But the result of all this inactivity when we arrived for our big
summer drill -- the 2 1/2 weeks we were actually expected to do
something because the Army brass was there to observe -- was
disastrous. Rusty and undisciplined, my unit descended on our
training grounds like a frat-house cruise to Ensenada. Armored
personnel carriers rolled up steep hillsides and overturned. Mortar
crews dropped their rounds hundreds of yards off range. Everywhere,
soldiers were breaking their arms or cracking their skulls or losing
their teeth, and the Army observers watched on and shook their heads
in dismay.
As a mortar man who spent most of my time surrounded by cannon
tubes and explosives, I found this lack of military professionalism
troubling. One minor slip-up and I could find myself punching a hole
in the ozone with the top of my head. I vowed that no matter what, I
would get through the next two weeks without getting killed or
injured.
I managed to keep that promise for two straight days, and then my
platoon was sent out on a nighttime live-fire exercise. I was
standing on the top of a tank-mounted mortar and had just finished
handing a live round to the gunner when my sergeant called my name
from below.
“Yeah, sergeant?” I shouted to him, taking out my ear-plugs at the
exact moment the gunner dropped the round into the mortar tube.
It was as if God himself leaned down from heaven and said, “Boom.”
I would never hear the high notes on a violin again.
I rolled on the ground for 15 minutes clutching my ears, while my
platoon sergeant stood over me and -- I assume -- asked me if I were
OK.
“--- ---- ----?,” the sergeant asked.
“WHAT?”
“---- ---- ---!” he repeated angrily.
A medic turned up and checked my ears. Seeing neither blood nor
brain matter coming out of them, he pronounced me fit and sent me
back to my unit.
My platoon sergeant was furious at me. How was he ever going to
get that next promotion if his men kept blowing out their eardrums?
To impress upon me his displeasure, he ordered me to gather, rinse
out and sterilize every water canteen in our platoon.
“Maybe my time might be better spent getting some safety training,
sergeant,” I said. The pain in my ears and the subsequent dressing
down had me in an insubordinate frame of mind.
“You know, instead of cleaning the platoon’s canteens, you’d
better make it the whole company’s,” my sergeant replied, and walked
away.
It took me half a day to gather up all those canteens, many of
which had been left lying all over the place by their careless
owners. I was six hours into washing them when I unscrewed the cap
off one and recoiled at the smell that rose from it. I lifted the
canteen cautiously to my nose, sniffed and shook my head. Someone had
filled it to the brim with Peppermint Schnapps.
Since I had no idea whose canteen it was -- all of them had
numbers inked on them instead of names -- I dumped the contents on
the ground and through it in the soapy water with the rest.
It was just past midnight when I learned the identity of the
canteen’s owner.
“WHO EMPTIED MY CANTEEN? I’LL KILL ‘EM!” Sgt. Stump’s boomed
across our bivouac site, loud enough to jar me out of my slumber 50
years away. “WHO DID IT? HE’S MINE, WHOEVER IT IS! HE’S MINE!”
Oh no, I thought to myself as 40 fingers pointed toward my cot. In
a second, Stump was standing next to me. “SILVA? SILVA DID IT? I
CAN’T BELIEVE IT! WHO TOLD SILVA TO EMPTY MY CANTEEN? WHO?”
“Uh, the sergeant,” I replied.
“THE SERGEANT? SILVA THINKS HE’S BEING SLICK! LET ME TELL YOU, I
GOT SOMETHING FOR SILVA.! SILVA BETTER JUST WAIT, ‘CAUSE I’M GONNA
GET ‘EM!”
Next week: Sgt. Stump and the fast track to heaven.
* DAVID SILVA is a Times Community News editor. Reach him at (909)
484-7019 or by e-mail at [email protected].
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