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Authors: Matt Gallagher

BOOK: Youngblood
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“Clean that off before you zip him up,” I said. When they didn't move quickly enough, I did it myself.

“Be easy,
habibi
,” I said, closing his jaw and eyelids. Then I got back on the radio while the soldiers bagged him.

30

S
aif came the next morning to the patio, where I was watching the pink-and-purple light of the seven o'clock hour blink out. The Sultan was rising again, a new day. I hadn't slept, and held a cigarette that wouldn't stop quivering.

“She's here,” he said, handing me a photocopied map with a red circle on it. “Can you hear me, Loo-tenant Porter? This is where she is.”

We went to her. I needed to do something with the day.

She lived in a hamlet west of the Villages, just across the Anbar border. I coordinated with the marines, since they were the landowners there, which suddenly sounded like such a ridiculous term.

Captain Vrettos commended me for my initiative when I said I needed to talk to a source outside our area. He looked almost healthy for once, even had color in his face. The news of the Cleric's death had already ricocheted up the command—we'd received congratulatory messages from the Big Man and brigade commander, and were expecting one from the division commander. Captain Vrettos thanked me again for what we'd done the night before.

I didn't say anything, because I couldn't. He asked if I was okay. I said I was. He said he was always there if I needed to talk about the rigors of war and leadership. I said that was cool to know.

“One more thing,” he said.

“Oh?” I said.

“It's the first day of Ramadan,” he said. “Just so you know.”

•  •  •

We left Ashuriyah. I saw the Barbie Kid on the roadside, alone near the northern fringe of the market. He leaned against a crooked utility pole and his pink sweats shined in the morning like a fallen star. He still didn't
have any shoes on his feet. I waved, but he just watched us and texted on a cell phone. We passed under the stone arch. Though I didn't turn around to face the dead cleric and his beard of snow, I felt his glasses on my back. Somehow, I thought, he knows I'm off to find his daughter.

We drove west, the countryside melting into shades of dun. Berms rose and fell like ocean swells. This is the desert, I thought, free and true. I took a gulp of Rip It from the back hatch and breathed in baked air and laughed because it didn't feel so strange anymore. None of it did. The soldiers asked what was wrong, and I brought up Ramadan.

“The Muslim fasting month,” I said. “We should do it with them.”

We hit an IED. One of the tire-popping kind that rattle the brain cage but fail to actually pop tires. A few months before, it would've caused an uproar, stirring the bantam energy of men yet untested. The vehicle's emergency system was the only one who spoke. “Exit the vehicle immediately,” she said. We got out, checked our ears for blood, and made sure the Stryker still worked. Then we kept going.

At a dried-out reservoir bed, we turned south onto a thin road made of silt. Everyone seemed nervous, the radios clear of chatter, limbs taut and stiff. No one liked unfamiliar areas this late into a deployment, and before the mission I'd overheard some of the joes bitching about me “glory hunting.”

I was surprised by how little I cared what they thought.

A herd of one-humped camels wandered onto the road, and we stopped. The men asked if we could drive through them, because it could be a delay tactic for ambushers, and who cared if we ran over a camel or two? I told them to shut up and wait, because they were just camels. The shepherd, a teenage boy wearing a Guns N' Roses concert tee, frowned as we passed, even though we'd waited for him and his herd.

About a mile down the dirt road, we spotted a half moon of five small mud huts. We parked there. I dismounted, tapping Snoop and Batule to follow. There was a small, square garden of green shrubs and
dandelions in the middle of the houses, marked by two strands of barbwire and four wooden poles at each corner. The air was windless and smelled of wildflowers.

The three of us walked by the huts. Nothing stirred, and the only sound I could make out was our own strained breathing. I searched the windows for peeking eyes or fingertips holding back curtains. Thoughts of an ambush flitted through my mind. I took off my helmet, grabbed the hand mic on Batule's back, closed my eyes, and waited for the sniper's shot I'd never hear, let alone see.

I counted to ten and thought of a train ride with Will when we were boys, all infinite hopes and forever dreams, play-fighting with our hands around each other's shoulders. We were pretending to be antiheroes like good postmodern American boys, he Batman, me Wolverine, watching the sleepy coastal towns of California blur by, slowly at first, then quicker and quicker until we couldn't even make out the names of the towns being passed, let alone the streets or mailboxes.

I'd worshipped my brother my entire life, though it sometimes came out wrong, like as resentment. Five and a half years' difference in age could do that. He'd been a tough act to follow, and I figured the last thing he needed was more people telling him how smart and capable he was. I knew everyone thought I'd joined up because he had, even our parents. Maybe he felt that way, too. But that hadn't been it, not exactly. It wasn't to be him, or to be like him. It'd been to believe in something the way he had. To know idealism as something more than a word. That had been what I wanted.

He'd lost that belief somewhere along the line, somehow. I doubted I'd ever had it.

Now he was learning to be a goddamn businessman. And me? I didn't even know anymore.

I opened my eyes, took in a deep breath of dust, and cursed. Ignoring Snoop and Batule, I walked to the center garden and studied the dandelions.

The sound of kicked pebbles brought my eyes up from the garden.
A small woman in an ankle-length gray dress walked across the half moon spinning an umbrella above her. She wore a shawl but no veil, and hair fell from her head in black waves. Her complexion was fair for an Iraqi. A coffee stain of a mark splashed across her left cheek, and an arrow nose pierced out at us. I lapped her up like water, lingering at the curves of her hips and again at the small dip in her neckline. It wasn't until I made it to her eyes, though, two jade ovals shining defiantly, that I knew we'd found her.

“Well-come,” she said. Behind her, two boys wearing matching striped shirts clutched her dress. Neither stood taller than her knees. A small pink scar the width of Silly String ran down the elder's left earlobe to the top of his neck. He scowled at us while his little brother stared.

“Hi,” I said. “My name's Jack Porter.”

“Hello.”

I pointed to the black umbrella and switched to Arabic. “What's with that?”

She smiled, revealing a set of blocky teeth stained light brown. A dimple sank into her cheek, under the birthmark.

“It seldom rains here,” she said. Her English was awkward and slow, but clear. “But we need many umbrellas.”

She kept spinning the umbrella in circles, clockwise twice, counterclockwise once, again and again. I watched with my mouth agape until Snoop coughed.

“Would you and your men like any water?” she asked.

“No, thanks,” I said. “It's Ramadan, you know.”

31

From: Ken Tisdale

To: Jack Porter

Re: ? from Ashuriyah

August 18, 10:17 PM

LIEUTENANT PORTER—

I WAS INTERESTED TO RECEIVE YOUR EMAIL. IT'S GOOD TO HEAR THE EFFORTS OF MY COMPANY IN ASHURIYAH ARE STILL HAVING A POSITIVE IMPACT ON THE ESTABISHMENT OF A FREE AND DEMOCROTIC IRAQ.

THERE WAS AN OFFICIAL INVESTIGATION INTO THE DISAPPEARANCE OF STAFF SERGEANT RIOS. IF IT'S OF INTEREST TO YOU AND YOU BELIEVE IT CAN HELP YOUR UNIT'S EFFORTS, I RECOMMEND CONTACTING YOUR BRIGADE'S JAG OFFICE. THEY CAN LOCATE THE OFFICIAL REPORT. THOUGH I HAVENT READ IT FOR SOME YEARS, IT WAS FOUND THAT STAFF SERGEANT RIOS VIOLATED OUR UNIT'S PROCEDURES BY WALKING AWAY FROM THE OUTPOST UNAUTHORIZED.

THERE WAS ALSO AN OFFICIAL INVESTIGATION INTO THE SHOOTING OF THE INSURGENT ENGAGED BY LIEUTENANT GRANT IN CLOSE QUARTERS. IT WAS FOUND THAT MY COMPANY ACTED IN ACCORDANCE WITH ALL RULES OF ENGAGEMENT.

THANK YOU FOR YOUR WORDS ABOUT LIEUTENANT GRANT. HIS DEATH WAS A TERRIBLE LOSS FOR ALL OF US WHO SERVED
WITH HIM. WE TRIED TO GET HIM THE HELP HE NEEDED. HE'S WITH GOD NOW.

PLEASE UNDERSTAND THAT GIVEN THE SENSITIVE NATURE OF YOUR INQUIRY, AND THE IMPLICATIONS SUGGESTED IN YOUR EMAIL, I'VE ALERTED YOUR CHAIN-OF-COMMAND TO THIS EXCHANGE, SPECIFICALLY YOUR EXECUTIVE OFFICER, A FORMER WEST POINT CLASSMATE OF MINE. HE'S A GOOD OFFICER. ANY FUTURE QUESTIONS SHOULD BE DIRECTED TO HIM.

YOURS IN SERVICE,

KENNETH TISDALE

MAJOR, INFANTRY

U.S. ARMY

32

FACEBOOK—NEW MESSAGE

August 18

Lieutenant Porter:

Your name was mentioned in our hometown's article as the officer who found Elijah so I am especially glad you contacted me. I had been wanting to say thank you for bringing closure to my family, especially my mom. We had another service for Elijah a couple weeks ago, this time with a proper burial.

It's strange to hear that my brother is still known in Iraq, but also good. To be honest, I don't really know how to answer your questions. We weren't close. When he joined the army, he stopped contacting us. He was very bitter—our father left when we were children, and he never stopped being angry about it. Hated school, hated Texas, hated us, hated himself. I didn't even know he knew Arabic until your message. We didn't know he'd been sent to Iraq until the army chaplain showed up on our porch to say he'd gone missing there.

As for good stories, there's this one, which is how I like to remember him. It was his junior year of high school, and he was working at the adventure park, saving up to buy a used car. Some friends and I went to the park after school, and a group of older boys started messing with us. They got on the log ride right after us, and kept taunting us from their log the entire time. They wouldn't leave us alone. Elijah saw the whole thing. So he waited for our log to go down the big drop, and when their log was at the very top, he shut
down the ride and walked away. They were up there for hours, screaming for help. It was funny. Elijah lost his job, but he didn't care.

Maybe not the greatest story, but it was a nice, older brother thing to do. Don't have many memories like that.

Hope this helps some and Thank You For Your Service.

Sarah Rios

33

15 March 2006

Night Flower—

I'm sorry I didn't visit tonight. There was a mission on the other side of town and the Lieutenant insisted I go. I promise to make it up to you. We got some care packages today—would you prefer a Connect Four board game or a stuffed koala?

Just kidding. I'll bring you both.

Have you calmed down? You dream of America, but staying here is best. We can have the life you see in the movies, here in Iraq, in Ashuriyah. The America you imagine no longer exists, if it ever did. You need to know that your father lives in more luxury than anyone from my hometown. Until I came to Iraq, until I met your father, I had never been in a house as large as yours. Or known a man who owned five Mercedes. Or seen a marble fountain, like the eagle in your driveway. Be careful what you ask for, Night Flower, that's all I'm saying.

We will visit, of course. I will show you the monuments in New York and Washington, and take you to the California beaches. But Ashuriyah will be home. Our children will know the meaning of family, and be part of the new Iraq.

I know you're laughing now. Yes, a new Iraq. They call me the “money man” for a reason. I can—and will—make your father the most important sheik in the province, much more important than just being in charge of Sahwa. We will build roads. We will build schools. We will build power stations and plants. We're already planning the largest hospital in the country, bigger than anything in Baghdad,
something that will make Ashuriyah one of the most important places in the Middle East.

If you still don't understand, talk to your father. He knows. He believes.

Forty soldiers sleep around me now in the outpost, their minds far away, on everything that is typical. They are here to survive and endure, not to change. All they care about is getting home alive. I used to blame them for this, but that was unfair. I will get them home alive. But I won't be going with them. I'm staying here. For you. For us.

I met your brother yesterday. I'll tell you about it next time I visit.

Give your father my best. Good night, Night Flower, tomorrow awaits. Allah is One, the heart is one, and the heart only belongs to the One,

E.

BOOK III

34

N
one of the locals could remember a Ramadan like it, not even the elders. The summer heat was supposed to blow away in the wind, they said, not wash away in rain. If they thought it meant anything, though, they kept it to themselves.

I fasted through the holy month, alone among the occupiers. I didn't quite feel cleansed by it, but it gave me something to talk about with Rana. She was a source now. Our source. We came on the days she said to, when her husband was away in Baghdad managing his concrete business. Her information wasn't great, but it wasn't bad, either. She knew of some cache spots along the canal.

She didn't speak much of the ghost who haunted her, though during our third meeting she let me read one of his love letters. When I handed it back, I searched her face for signs of sadness or reminiscence. I found neither. Instead, she was studying me behind her arrow nose, probing, considering. I swallowed away a blush. She folded up the letter, placing it in a hidden pocket of the gray cotton dress she always seemed to wear.

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