Name
: Badrus s (2100730095)
Class
: 4B
Title
: Slow Walk in a Sad Rain
Author
: JOHN P. McAFEE
Published
: In Hardcover by Warner Books
Year
: May, 1994.
A. Chapter 1: Don’t
Look Behind The Curtain.
In front of you and at the end of a
dusty yellow dirt road is a large barbed-wire gate; from the gate to a large
telephone pole runs a wire that keeps the heavy gate balanced. Directly beneath
the place where the wire attaches it to the pole is a sign. It reads, normal is
a cycle on a washing machine.
There is a cowbell attached to the
gate. Ring it and someone in the machine-gun bunker directly in front of you on
the other side of the gate will cautiously peer over the burlap bags filled
with sand and ask, “What do you want here?” that someone is quite voice. He is
always asking question like that.
Don’t shake the beer cans on either
side of the gate-the ones hanging on the razor wire. They will make a noise,
too. They are filled with rocks, and if you shake them, quite voice will shoot
you, and then you won’t be able to answer his questions.
Color those times brown.
Like the sampan that brought all of us-
quite voice, and me to special forces a camp 134, located twenty miles above
Moc Hoa and less than a mile from Cambodia.
Waiting for us was shotgun. No one knew
how long he had been in Vietnam or how long he had been waiting for us at the
camp. He would show us how to survive.
B.
Chapter
2: The Opening Curtain.
According to scientists, the triangle
is the only shape in nature that does not occur naturally. So we didn’t live
inside a triangle. We live inside three of them.
The first triangle was a quarter mile
of razor wire. The second triangle was located inside the outer wire and
consisted of three huge earthen mounds ten feet high and four hundred feet
long. These were called bermes by the French. From the air it looked
like a crazed, giant mole hadn’t been able to make up its mind where to
go. At each corner of the berms were machine gun bunkers facing outward,
scanning the wire, looking for giant moles and things much worse.
In 1969 everything in the village was
the same as it had been in 1939; mortar shells were still coming out of
Cambodia; villagers went to market in the province capital, Moc Hoa, during
high tide and waited till the next high tide to go home; the rice was planted
and harvested the same as it always had been. The three triangles north of the
village were all that was different.
The triangles were a camp 134.
The villagers knew that if they ignored
the triangles long enough, the triangles would go way. They were right.
C. Chapter 3: Shotgun.
Shotgun was filing the fuses on the
grenades again. He was helpful like that, even when we didn’t want him to be
helpful. Of course, nobody had enough balls to tell shotgun to leave things
alone.
The problem was that you didn’t know
how far he had filed the fuses. There you would be, in the middle of a world of
shit, and the only way out would be a couple of strategically placed-okay,
hastily lobbed-grenades, and you didn’t have time once the pin was pulled to
pick out where the grenades were supposed to go, lobbing speaking.
One trick we used was to throw the
grenades without pulling the pins. At first the other team would laugh at our
rookie mistake. Then they’d pick up the grenades and pull the pins to throw the
explosive little baseballs back at us. Then, colonel black just like the
elephants –had to come a long and fuck everything up. He was the colonel of the
B team in Moc Hoa. He was always passing along orders to his A team. Judging by
his orders, we’d concluded he was crazy.
Anyway, we thought it was neat how
colonel black, explaining his idea, kept a serious face as we began filing past
him to our jeeps outside. Then we noticed that shotgun hadn’t moved at all.
This wasn’t unusual. After two cases of Vietnamese beer, sometime he didn’t
move for days, but we were embarrassed for shotgun in front of the colonel. As
we put our hands tentatively under his arms to lift him shotgun spoke. “Let’s
do the mission. I’m bored.”
We sat back down.
The colonel outlined his plan.
D. Chapter 4: The 4.2
Mobile Unit, Part I.
They are dog turds!” said spec. 7
Thompson. Now, I know that you are thinking-there are no spec. 7’s in the
army-and you are right. But Thompson had given himself the promotions every
four mounts in country as a way of marking time and not forgetting it. He’d
paint the little upside-down chevrons under his specialist insignia on his
sleeve, and then if he forgot how long he had been in Vietnam, he’d look at his
sleeve and count the chevrons and relax again.
We all celebrated the quarterly
promotions by having a barbecue-elephant steak was a favorite-and toasting
Thompson as he painted another stripe on his uniform. Life was good.
A fact is a fact. Quite voice had
definitely voiced a fact. Still, the sensors had to be placed over our area of
operation (AO), which was a little smaller than Missouri, since it extended
into Cambodia. Judging from the number of little rubber turds there were in the
sacks, we had enough to cover the area. Things were not that bad.
Then we heard shotgun’s voice over in
the mortar pit; he was arguing with his mortar. “What do you mean this mission
is not a good idea that we are all going to die?” His voice raised another
notch. “You are a goddamn coward!” Things were that bad.
E.
Chapter
5: The 42 Mobile Unit, Part II.
As I walked out of the camp carrying
the sack of turds I glanced back at our sign on the telephone pole: NORMAL IS A
CYCLE ON A WASHING MACHINE. Shotgun had put the sign on the pole after the jeep
full of inspectors had been blown up, not by a stray enemy round (it had been
broad daylight), but by one of the inspectors.
We all had bet what would happen when
the enemy triggered a sensor. I said the machine would give us the exact
coordinates, but not too many agreed with my theory. Most of them went with
Thompson’s idea that the green would change into a deeper shade of green.
Colonel black’s idea had been refined
thusly: we were to monitor the machine- which was what we were doing and when
it when off, we were to call the night-duty helicopter to our camp and put the
4.2 mortar, base plates and all, along with our selves-shotgun, quite voice and
me into the helicopter.
Once airborne, we were to proceed to
the activated sensor, sit down on the same sensor once it quite activating, set
up the mortar, and fire on those who’d set off the sensors.
F.
Chapter
6: The Night Of The Mobiles.
It was not the different shades of
green after all. On the fourth night, little white dots suddenly began dancing
next to line 37 on the horizontal scale and line 8 on the vertical scale. These
numbered vertical and horizontal lines matched the same vertical and horizontal
lines on a map of our area.
Our maps called that-place the point at
which line 37 horizontal and line 8 vertical intersected-the plain of reeds.
But Hughes aircraft worked only with verticals and horizontals, not maps and
people.
The first two sounds are what a large
mortar makes when its shells are leaving the earth. The second two sounds are
what a mortar shell sounds like when it’s hitting the earth again. The final
sounds are a battalion of pissed-off AK-47s, the weapon of choice for crack
North Vietnamese troops. But that’s not the bad news.
G. Chapter 7: The Bad
News.
There is a new species of a
centipede-something slowly crawling up my rifle barrel. I don’t dare move. I
watch the insect crawl across my sights, onto my hand, up my sleeve. I can feel
it on my skin. It crawls up my shoulder, hesitates, and starts down my back. It
stops. It starts. It stops again. Each leg rotates on my nerves. It gets to my
lower back. My head is dripping with sweet and I want to lay it on my rifle but
dare not move. The insect is forgotten as footsteps squish by me. There are
worse things than a crawling insect. I know that now.
H. Chapter 8: Beached.
Although it’s 1992 and there’s been
another war, I feel like I just got home. The kid is doing fine. I think the
nut is growing. Doc says it is, but I don’t trust him.
I suppose I will go trough life with
this ache deep within that’s not really treatable. I first became aware of the
ache when my son was born. I got worse each year he approached the approximate
age of the little boy. The ache almost ripped my body apart when we visited a
petting zoo and my little one the rump. My wife laughed and gave him a hug. I
got sick.
But he strange thing is, for every year
my son has passed the age of the little child dead in Laos, the ache has
diminished accordingly. Every time I give him a hug or tell him I love him, I
can feel the ache receding. Maybe the mind that looks back and judges is more
mature mind than the one that made the decision in the first place. We could
not be here if we had not been there. Maybe by loving my son I can make up for
taking love away from another family.
I showed my son the wall and all those
names, and after a long silence, he looked at me and said, “Let’s go home,
daddy. There’s nothing more to do here.” So we did.
This novel is not too easy, it needs time to read and understand it.
BalasHapusbut is easy for mr.hamidin
BalasHapuslol :D
glooodaak!