Authors: Patricia McCormick
Tags: #Brain Damage, #Hospitals, #Iraq War; 2003-, #Fiction, #Juvenile Fiction, #Iraq War; 2003, #Medical Fiction, #Memory, #Soldiers, #Street Children, #Action & Adventure, #General, #Health & Daily Living, #Diseases; Illnesses & Injuries, #Historical, #Military & Wars, #People & Places, #Middle East, #Social Issues
T
HE NURSE WITH THE FUZZY PIGTAILS CAME TO HIS BED THE
first thing the next morning, lugging a dusty green duffel bag. “Your buddy dropped this off,” she said, setting it on the bed. “Private Kane.”
“Justin?” Matt said. “Is he here?”
She shook her head. “He said you might want this stuff,” she said. Then one of the other nurses called out for her and she walked away, her white shoes squeaking with efficiency as she crossed the room.
Duct-taped to the bag was a note from Justin.
Dude,
You are still the baddest, cold-hard killer around—even if you are wearing a little blue hospital gown that shows your bare white ass. Good luck with the sex change operation.
Party on,
J
P.S. My dad can finally stop harping. Looks like I’m going to get a medal for saving that nubile white ass of yours.
P.P.S. Charlene says you can borrow her nail polish anytime.
J
USTIN’S DAD WAS A
V
IETNAM VET; HE’D GOTTEN A BUNCH OF
medals, including a Bronze Star with a V for valor. He was gung ho about the war, sending Justin letters saying how he’d better kill some hajis and bring home a medal. Justin didn’t answer his letters; he said he wasn’t going to write back until he had something to say that would shut his dad up. Matt smiled at the word
nubile.
An old word of the week.
And Charlene, who was only about five feet three but could bench-press more weight than half the guys in their battalion, was the biggest hard-ass in the group. “I’m in combat just as much as you guys are,” she’d said, holding out a quarter-size piece of shrapnel she wore on a cord around her neck. “Souvenir of a firefight from March.” The guys had given her merciless shit when she’d pulled a bottle of nail polish out of her duffel—until she showed them how to use it to repair a leak in the tube of her gas mask.
Matt tugged on the drawstring of his duffel bag. Stuffed inside were a couple pairs of clean underwear, a can of foot powder, his DVD player, along with the sixth season of
South Park,
his yearbook, a can of Pringles, and a packet of Skoal. At the bottom were his letters from Caroline folded inside a Ziploc bag, along with the picture he’d kept taped inside his helmet. He’d only been in the hospital for, what? forty-eight hours?, but the things
in the duffel bag looked like souvenirs from another life, like the baby pictures and old report cards his mom kept in a scrapbook—especially the picture of Caroline.
It was a photo of her in her cheerleading uniform. She was looking off into the distance, at something that was happening on the football field, twirling a strand of hair around her finger. He had another picture of her—a photo of the two of them at the prom, standing under an arch covered in plastic flowers—but he liked this one best because she hadn’t known her picture was being taken. She was just standing there, in front of everyone in the bleachers, unaware of how little-girlish she looked, twirling her hair around her finger, concentrating, trying to understand what had just happened on the field.
He slipped the picture out of the Ziploc bag and held it gingerly by the tips of his fingers. At night, before they went out on house-to-house searches, he’d take the picture out and spend the last few minutes before they left looking at Caroline twirling her hair, pretending he was in the bleachers watching her. He could practically feel the snap in the fall air, hear the shrill call of the referee’s whistle, feel the lump in his jacket pocket where he’d hidden a can of Budweiser.
But now she seemed more like someone in one of those celebrity magazines. Her face was familiar—the way Jennifer Aniston or Britney Spears was familiar—in
the way that makes you feel like you know the person, even though all you really know is their picture. He put the picture back in the Ziploc bag and slipped it under his pillow.
He opened the yearbook and flipped idly through the pages. He scanned the pictures of the debate team, the Honor Society, the Chemistry Club, and wondered what those kids were doing right now.
Go get Saddam,
one kid had written.
Remember the Alamo,
said another.
As he turned the page, a piece of paper fluttered onto the bed. It was a child’s drawing of a battle. The guns—M16s and M4s—were precisely drawn, even though they were nearly as big as the soldiers. A Black Hawk UH-60 hovered overhead—complete with Hellfire antitank missiles mounted on the sides. Its guns spit out a shower of bullets—drawn as a hundred tiny pencil hash marks arching across on the paper. At the bottom it was signed in wobbly English letters:
Ali.
The last time he’d seen Ali was when they were patrolling the market near the al-Hikma Mosque. Charlene had caught him trying to steal a blue plastic tarp off the back of their Humvee.
“Skittles,” he said, batting his eyes at Charlene. “Please.”
Ali had become a bit of a pest. He’d started out begging for food, but lately, he seemed to miraculously
appear whenever they were in his sector, hanging around, getting underfoot, begging for batteries, old magazines, empty soda cans—anything he could sell. Charlene had shooed him away, then turned to Matt. “We’re really not supposed to fraternize with the local children.”
Matt couldn’t believe it. She was quoting from the new Army Field Manual. “We’re here to help these people, Charlene. Besides, he’s just a kid.”
Matt picked up the drawing, studied it for a while, then tucked it inside the Ziploc bag along with Caroline’s letters.
F
RANCIS WAS BACK, WRITING FURIOUSLY IN A SMALL BLACK
notebook. At the other end of the room, there was a new guy—a middle-aged man with soft, sloping shoulders and a bit of a paunch—sitting up in bed reading
Hustler.
Matt decided to go for another walk, to see if he could make it as far as that guy’s bed.
He felt a little stronger this time, a little more steady on his feet, but he was aware that his right leg was dragging a little. It didn’t hurt; it just didn’t move in sync with his other leg. Two days and he was able to walk forty-five steps.
The guy turned the magazine upside down on his belly. “So,” he said, “what brings you here?”
“I was on the business end of an RPG,” Matt said. This phrase still didn’t sound quite right, but it was the one thing he was sure of. “What about you?”
“Threw my back out hauling a drum of kerosene,” he said. “I’m pretty sure they don’t give out Purple Hearts for that. Too bad. I’d like to bring that back to my class.”
Matt didn’t get it.
“Shop class,” the guy said. “I teach shop. I’m National Guard. Never thought they’d actually send us here. But I’ll tell you, I am too old for this crap. I’ll be forty-three next month and I am too old to be running around this godforsaken place, chasing after kids half my age, looking for hajis around every corner…”
An image—Justin bolting around a corner, running across the alley with his head down—flashed into Matt’s mind, then vanished as quickly as it had come.
“…but they need me, you know what I mean?” The shop teacher kept talking, unaware that Matt had stopped listening. “I can even rig up a DVD player to run off a car battery. What about you?” he said. “What do you do back home?”
“Me? Auto detailing.”
“So the army gave you a big pay raise, right? Nine
hundred a month to get shot at. I bet you’re not even legal to buy beer, am I right?”
Matt nodded.
Talking to this guy—or, rather, listening to him—was exhausting and Matt started to walk away, his head pounding.
He’d only gone about a half dozen steps when he had to stop and grab hold of the railing of an empty bed. He stood there as his legs trembled uncontrollably. The railing started to slip from his grasp—his hands were suddenly sweaty—and he felt his legs give out from under him.
A pair of hands grabbed him roughly, lifting him up by the armpits. It was Francis. Somehow he’d made it from the other end of the ward just in time.
“Whoa there, little buddy,” he said. “Am I gonna have to tell the bartender to cut you off?”
Matt looked into his eyes. They were deep brown, the color of a strong cup of coffee.
Matt shook his head. “I don’t even have a fake ID.”
Francis whistled through his teeth. “Your brain really did get shook up, kid.”
He helped Matt back to his bed, practically carrying him the last few yards, then turned back the covers and laid him down with a gentleness that shocked Matt.
“What did those MPs want with you?” Matt said as
Francis was about to leave.
Francis gazed out the window. “The truth?” he said, looking at some invisible point in the distance. “It’s like Jack Nicholson said. You can’t handle the truth.”
M
ATT SAT IN BED FLIPPING THROUGH THE PAGES OF A BOOK
of World Series trivia he’d found in the bathroom while the new guy in the bed across from him played with a yo-yo. Outside, he could hear the dull thrum of the hospital generator. A car drove by, its radio blaring a Middle Eastern tune—leaving a few quivering notes of the singer’s voice in its wake.
He knew that song from somewhere. He put down the trivia book and stared at the bobbing yo-yo. But what he saw was a dusty alleyway. An overturned car. A candy wrapper snagged on a coil of razor wire. Bullets kicking up sparks on the pavement. A mangy dog with a crooked tail.
“They all sound the same, don’t they?”
Matt blinked. The soldier with the yo-yo was talking to him. The man was sort of short, but he was well-built, with biceps so big, they stretched the sleeves of his T-shirt. His head was shaved clean and shaped like a
bullet and he had a tattoo on one arm that said
Mom.
“Their songs,” the guy said, not missing a beat as the yo-yo slid up and down on its string. “It’s always some chick with a high voice yodeling.”
As the last strains of the song died out, Matt thought again of the dusty alleyway. All of the alleys in Baghdad looked the same—piles of plaster where mortar rounds had hit the buildings, flat tires and abandoned car parts in the middle of the street, razor wire and graffiti everywhere. But right in the middle of all that chaos, all that destruction, you’d stumble on signs of family life—laundry flapping in the wind, a chicken pecking in a yard, a radio playing from somewhere inside.
“I know that song,” Matt said flatly.
“What? You listen to that shit?” The guy had curled the yo-yo into his palm, stopping its rhythmic motion.
“No,” said Matt. “Not really.”
The guy swiveled a little so his back was almost facing Matt and he pointed to a spot on his shoulder. “Shot,” he said. “By a sniper.”
Matt nodded to show his appreciation. “So are they sending you to Germany?”
“No fucking way,” he said. “They wanted to, but I told them ‘fuck no.’ Told them I was going to stay here and get better as fast as I can so I could get back out there with my boys.”
“Oh.” This guy was like Charlene: 110 percent committed to the mission. But he loved his squad, that was for sure.
Matt thought about his squad, about Justin, about Wolf and Figueroa, about their new squad leader, Sergeant McNally. The first thought that came to mind wasn’t a firefight or a door-to-door search.
It was the time Wolf’s mom sent him a bunch of cans of Silly String. The whole squad ran around the barracks, hiding and ambushing one another, spraying neon green Silly String everywhere, imitating the
ack-ack
sound of an M16 each time they fired. They were
playing
war, Matt remembered thinking, while a real one was raging outside.
As he watched Wolf squirt Silly String down the back of Figueroa’s shirt, he remembered thinking,
This
is what war is all about. It wasn’t about fighting the enemy. It wasn’t about politics or oil or even about terrorists. It was about your buddies; it was about fighting for the guy next to you. And knowing he was fighting for you.
He thought about Itchy, wondering if the guys in his squad were taking care of him. He could picture them, on their cots inside the abandoned school that they were using as their base. At this time of night, Figueroa would be writing to his wife, Matt and Justin would be playing Halo, and Wolf would be cleaning
his weapon or doing push-ups. And Itchy would be curled up in the shape of a comma at the foot of his cot, purring.
A
SHADOW FELL OVER THE BED AND
M
ATT OPENED HIS EYES TO
see Francis standing above him, his leg twitching. “Here,” he said, holding out what looked like a small paperback book. “I traded some Vicodin for it.”
Matt studied the thing in his hand. It was a notebook with a picture of a basket of puppies on the front.
“I know,” Francis said. “It’s kind of ‘Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell,’ but it was all I could find. Got it off a nurse from Mobile.”
Matt flipped through the empty pages of the book, not quite sure what he was supposed to do with it.
“Write down everything you know,” Francis said. “Everything about what happened the day they brought you in here. When they bring you over to Fuchs’s office, you’ll at least have something.”
And then Francis disappeared, leaving Matt sitting there, staring at the blank first page of the notebook. Fuchs’s office. He struggled to remember who Fuchs was. Kwong had mentioned him. Was Fuchs the one who was
going to question him, write up a report? Francis seemed pretty worked up about the whole thing. But Kwong had said it was routine under these circumstances. What did that mean?
There was so much Matt didn’t know. He was in the hospital because of an RPG—Justin had told him that much. But he didn’t remember anything about the attack. Kwong said it was because of that brain thing he had. And he said he might have trouble learning new information. So Matt made two lists: the things he did know and the things he didn’t.
The list of things he didn’t know included big things and small ones. The details of the attack. Where his squad was now. What exactly Francis had done to end up in trouble. When he’d last heard from Caroline. Where he’d seen that dog with the crooked tail.