Part 2
In a country where youth is adored, we lost ours before we were out of our twenties. We learned to accept death there, and it erased our sense of immortality. We met our human frailties, the dark side of ourselves, face-to-face โฆ The war destroyed our faith, betrayed our trust, and dropped us outside the mainstream of our society. We still donโt fully belong. I wonder if we ever will.
โWINNIE SMITH
AMERICAN DAUGHTER GONE TO WAR
Chapter no 23
At twenty-five, Frankie moved with the kind of caution that came with age; she was constantly on guard, aware that something bad could happen at any moment. She trusted neither the ground beneath her feet nor the sky above her head. Since coming home from war, she had learned how fragile she was, how easily upended her emotions could be.
Still, she had learned to hide her outbursts, her crying jags, even from her two best friends, who, for most of their first year in Virginia, had watched her intently, trying constantly to divine her moods, assess her level of self-destruction, her grief and anger. In the beginning, it had been difficult, settling into the time-honored McGrath camouflage ofย Iโm okay.
The nightmares had been terrible when she first arrived here, had still wrenched her out of sleep and sent her careening onto the floor.
But timeโand friendshipโhad done exactly as promised: pain and grief had grown soft in her hands, almost pliable. She found she could form them into something kinder if she was deliberate in thought and action, if she lived a careful, cautious life, if she stayed away from anything that reminded her of the war, of loss, of death.
By Christmas of that first year, sheโd felt strong enough to write to her mother, who had promptly written back. In their familyโs way, neither spoke of the terrible night that had precipitated Frankieโs flight across the country. They simply merged back onto their familiar road, the ground a little bumpy between them, but both determined to stay the course. Frankie
remembered, and often reread, that first letter from her mother:ย I am so grateful to your Army girlfriends for being there for you when your father and I were not. We love you, and if we donโt say it often enough, it is because we grew up in families where there was no such vocabulary. About your father and his โฆ reticence about you and the war. All I can say is that something in him was broken by being unable to serve his country. All the men of his generation went to Europe, while he stayed home. Yes, he was proud of Finley and ashamed of you. But perhaps in truth he is ashamed of himself and worries that you judge him harshly, as he feared his friends had done โฆ
Frankie never spoke about her struggles, tried never to sayย Vietnamย out loud. And when she felt a rise in her blood pressure, a flood of grief or anger, she smiled tautly and left whatever room she was in. Sheโd learned that people noticed a raised voice; quiet was the perfect camouflage for pain.
Initially, it had been almost impossible to sever Vietnam from her life story. The world, it seemed, had conspired against such a healing.
The war was constantly in conversation. In bars, in living rooms, on the television. Everyone had an opinion. Now the majority of Americans seemed to be against the war and the men who fought it. In 1969, the world had learned about the horrifying massacre at My Lai, where American soldiers had killed as many as five hundred unarmed South Vietnamese civiliansโmen, women, and childrenโin their village. It had intensified the baby-killer talk about vets, more and more of whom were turning to heroin in-country and coming home addicted.
America was losing the war; that was obvious to everyone except Nixon, who kept lying to the people and sending soldiers off to war, too many of whom came home in body bags.
Each of the women had responded differently to the rising tide of violence that was ripping the country apart, dividing young from old, rich from poor, conservative from liberal. Ethel was in her third year of veterinary school and worked part-time with her father. She and Noah had begun to talk of marriage, kids. The two of them never missed a Sunday at church or a local high school football game. Their fondness for casseroles and cribbage had created long-standing jokes between the women. Ethel had grown up on this farm, among these people, and she intended to be
buried here. So she kept her head down and did her job and said nothing controversial to her friends and neighbors.ย This war will be over soon,ย she always said,ย but Iโll always live here. My kids will be in 4-H, Iโll probably run the damned PTA.
Barb was the opposite in every way. Sheโd become a vocal, participatory member of the Vietnam Veterans Against the War. She went to meetings. She painted signs. She protested. And not just the war. She lobbied for passage of the Equal Rights Amendment. She marched for a womanโs right to a safe abortion and basic health care. When she wasnโt trying to change the world, she earned money by bartending. It was, she said, a great job for a woman who hadnโt yet decided where she belonged.
Frankie, on the other hand, had found her way back through nursing. Sheโd put up with the initial prejudice and disregard for her Vietnam training and become determined to show her skills. Sheโd worked harder and longer than most of the other nurses, put in the hours, and had taken specialized classes. In time, sheโd become a surgical nurse; now she was working toward a specialization in trauma surgery.
On this cool April morning, she woke well before the dawn and dressed for riding. It would be cold out, a spring crispness in the air.
She had come to love the sweet-smelling air of the South, the way mist clung to the grass in the morning. It calmed the tumult in her soul. Today, the cherry trees along the driveway were in full pink bloom. Ethel had been right, all those years ago, when sheโd said that riding horses was restorative to oneโs sense of peace.
Frankie loved the undulating green fields, the black four-rail fencing, the trees that changed their color with the weather. Now the leaves were the bright lime hue of new growth, and full of pink blossoms. But mostly it was being around the horses that calmed Frankie. Ethel had been right about that. Riding had steadied Frankie as much as friendship had.
Frankie ducked through the empty space between fence rails and headed into the barn; she could barely see her boots, the mist was so thick and gray. Inside, the barn smelled of manure and fresh bales of hay and the grain they stored in large metal garbage cans. The horses nickered at her as she
passed.
At the last stall on the left, she paused and lifted the latch. Silver Birch walked toward her, lips moving, looking for treats, breath snorting.
โHey, girl,โ Frankie said, holding out her gloved hand.
Silver ate the grain messily, more falling to the ground than getting in her mouth. Frankie led the mare out into the aisle and saddled her quickly, pressing a knee to the mareโs belly to aid her in tightening the girth.
In no time, Frankie and Silver were out on the trails, galloping through the mist. When Silver started to sound winded, Frankie slowed the mare to a trot, then a walk. They walked home slowly, clomping at a steady, calming pace.
Back in the barn, she fed and watered the horses, turned Silver out, and headed back to the small bunkhouse. Early morning sunlight drenched the fields. Off to the left was the main house, with its steeply pitched roof, large and welcoming porch, and whitewashed wooden sides, where Ethel lived with her father. Well off to the right was the bunkhouse that had once boarded farmworkers. Over the past eighteen months, it had been remodeled into a two-bedroom cottage where Frankie and Barb lived. The three women had learned how to paint, demolish, rebuild, and do rudimentary plumbing. Theyโd spent hours haunting garage sales and hauling other peopleโs junk to be their treasures. Many evenings were spent sitting around the sooty river-rock fireplace, talking. They never ran out of things to say.
Frankie climbed the few steps and went into the bunkhouseโs only bathroom, where she showered, changed, and dressed for work.
She was out of the house and on her way to work before Barb was even out of bed.
At the end of a twelve-hour shift in the OR, Frankie waved goodbye to her coworkers and headed out to her carโa dented old Ford Falcon that she and Barb sharedโand jumped in. On the way out of town, she popped a John Denver tape into the eight-track and sang along.
She drove to the tavern where Barb currently worked and parked among the battered old trucks of the regulars who were there this time of day. Barbโs bicycle stood slanted against the rough exterior plank wall.
Inside, the place was dark and musty-smelling, with sawdust on the floors and barstools worn to a velvet feel by one hundred years of faithful
customers.
Barb had worked here for the past few months; it was not a job she intended to keep much longer. Or so she often said. Soon sheโd look for something higher-end, nearer to the city, where the tips were better. But this was close to the farm and gave her lots of time to volunteer for her causes.
Now she stood behind the bar, a soggy bar rag over one shoulder, a red- white-and-blue cotton kerchief over her Afro. Huge gold hoop earrings caught the light.
Frankie sidled up onto a barstool. โHey, there.โ
โJed! Iโm taking a break,โ Barb called out. A moment later her boss, Jed, shuffled out from the office and took his place behind the bar.
Barb grabbed a pair of cold beers and led the way out back, to one of the picnic tables. Come summer, the bar would sell house-smoked barbecue on red plastic plates, but not till the weather warmed up.
Frankie took the beer, snapped the cap, and took a long drink, leaning back against the table, stretching her legs out. She glanced at Barb, frowned, and said, โWhatโs wrong?โ
โYou can read my thoughts now?โ
โThis is not a new skill, Barbara. Whatโs up?โ
โDamn it, I was going to ease my way into it.โ She sighed. โI have a favor to ask.โ
โAnything. You know that.โ
โItโs for all of them,โ Barb said. โFinley and Jamie and Rye, and all the fallen.โ
Frankie flinched. The names were rarely mentioned between them. Barb and Ethel still worried that Frankie was fragile and could slide too easily back into grief, and they were right to be concerned. Frankie still sometimes woke up and, for a split second, forgot that Rye was gone and reached for him.
โThe VVAW are meeting in Washington next week to protest. Guerrilla theater, theyโre calling it.โ
Vietnam Veterans Against the War.
โYou know Iโm not interested. Youโve asked before,โ Frankie said. โIโm not a marcher.โ
โThis is special. Trust me. We arenโt the only group that will march. We want to create a media event so big Nixon has to notice.โ Barb looked at
her. โCome with me.โ
โBarb, you know I try not to think about โฆ over there.โ
โI know, and I respect the effort. I know how hard itโs been for you, but theyโre still dying in the jungle, Frankie. Dying for a lost war. And, well โฆ you told me to do something for Will. This is what Iโm doing.โ
โNot fair, throwing my words back at me.โ
โI know, I know. Itโs shitty, but weโre believers, you and me,โ Barb said. โAs banged-around as weโve been and as much as weโve seen, weโre patriots.โ
โNo one wants patriots anymore,โ Frankie said. โI canโt wear an Army T-shirt off the property or Iโll be spit on. The country thinks weโre monsters. But I wonโt disrespect the troops.โ
โItโs not disrespectful to protest, Frankie. We had that wrong. It takes guts to stand up and demand a change. Weโreย vets.ย Shouldnโt our voices be heard in protest, too? Shouldnโt they beย loud?โ
Barb pulled a folded-up magazine page out of her back pocket, smoothed out the wrinkles, and laid it out on the table. It was a full-page ad inย Playboyย for the Vietnam Veterans Against the War. The picture was of a solitary coffin, draped in an American flag. The headline readย IN THE LAST
TEN YEARS, OVER 335,000 OF OUR BUDDIES HAVE BEEN KILLED OR WOUNDED IN VIETNAM, AND MORE ARE BEING KILLED EVERY DAY. WE DONโT THINK ITโS WORTH
IT.ย In the bottom corner of the ad was a plea toย JOIN US.
Frankie stared at the advertisement. Since the tide of public opinion had turned so clearly against the war, more and more numbers of the wounded and fallen were being reported. It was tough to see in print. So many young men killed, while others were still being shipped over, spun up.
The press wasnโt blindly reporting what Nixon wanted them to anymore. Journalists had been granted access to the troops; they witnessed the battles, reported on the dead. This week a female journalist from Australia had been among a group captured by the Peopleโs Army of Vietnam and taken prisoner. Kate Webb. Everyone should now know that women were in Vietnam, too. Frankie took a deep breath, exhaled.
Barb said, โSlim told me once that the average life expectancy of a helicopter pilot in Vietnam is thirty days.โ
โI know. Iโve heard that, too. I donโt know if itโs true.โ
โWe have to stop it,โ Barb said. โUs. The ones who paid the price.โ
It was wrong. Criminal, the way the U.S. government was failing the military. But what could a handful of veterans do to stop a war? People like Barb had been marching for years, and what good had it done?
Protest seemed futile. Maybe even unpatriotic.
But men were dying over there, crashing in helicopters and stepping on land mines and getting shot by an enemy they never saw.
How could sheย notย protest that, at least? โWe could be arrested,โ Frankie said.
โThey could call in the National Guard. We could be tear-gassed or shot at,โ Barb said solemnly, then added, โLike at Kent State and Jackson.โ
โWay to look at the bright side.โ
โThis isnโt a joke,โ Barb said. โThe old white men who run this country are scared. And people do stupid, ugly things when theyโre scared.โ She leaned close. โBut theyโre counting on their power and our fear. And every minute, some womanโs son is being killed over there. Some girlโs brother.โ
Frankie didnโt want to march. She didnโt want to think about Vietnam and what it had cost her. She wanted to do what sheโd been trying to do for more than two years: forget.
It was dangerous, what Barb was asking of Frankie, an upsetting of an already precariously balanced peace in Frankieโs mind.
No fear, McGrath. Jamieโs voice in her head. Barb was right.
Frankie needed to do this. As a veteran of Vietnam, and for Finley and Jamie and Rye; she had to add her voice to the rising scream of dissent. She had to say:ย No more.
โJust this once,โ Frankie said.
She regretted it almost instantly.
On the day before the march, Frankie had trouble concentrating at work. In between surgeries, she worried about what lay ahead, her mind obsessively scrolled through the violence that had marked so many rallies and protests. Nixon had sent the National Guard in to stop a peaceful protest at Kent State less than a year ago. When the smoke cleared, four students were dead
and dozens wounded. Only eleven days later, the police had shot students at a Jackson State College war protest.
But the truth was that although she worried about violence at the march, she worried more about standing there with other veterans, saying,ย I was there.ย For the past two years, sheโd hidden that fact at every opportunity, changed the conversation when Vietnam came up. Even Barb and Ethel rarely mentioned Vietnam; Frankie knew their silence was to protect her, and on good days, she knew it helped. On bad days, she worried that she couldnโt forget because there was something wrong with her, something broken. In time, hiding her service and not talking about it had allowed shame to take root. She was never exactly sure what she was ashamed of, just that she was weak, or had somehow done something bad, been a part of something bad, something no one wanted to talk about. Maybe it was simply being a part of the apparent breakdown of American honor. She didnโt know.
On the way home, she tried to figure out what the hell one should wear to a protest meeting. She decided on hip-hugger jeans with a wide western- style belt and a ribbed white turtleneck. She dried her hair down straight from a center part. At the last minute, she went in search of her ANC pinโa brass caduceus with its wings behind a boldย Nโand pinned it on her sweater.
Leaving her bedroom, she shut the door behind her.
In the kitchen, Barb and Ethel were talking quietly. Barb wore her old, stained fatigue pants with a black turtleneck and a Leviโs jacket with the sleeves cut off. Dozens of the pins and patches sheโd collected from friends and patients in Vietnam decorated the front of the vest. Sheโd drawn a big black peace symbol on the back. Sheโd painted aย BRING THEM HOME!ย sign and stapled it to a yardstick.
Ethel, wearing her blue lab coat, poured herself a cup of coffee. โI donโt know how Barb talked you into this, Frank. The VVAW is as sexist as the SDS,โ she added. โIf you girls show up, theyโll ask you to make coffee and do snack runs.โ
โThose who stay behind donโt get to bitch,โ Barb said. โDisappointingly,โ Frankie said glumly.
The three of them had spent at least an hour last night sitting around the firepit in the backyard, wrapped in woolen blankets, discussing todayโs
march. Barb had said that more than a dozen anti-war groups were scheduled to arrive in D.C. in the next few days. The VVAW wanted to separate themselves by marching first. They had big plans to draw attention to themselves. Make the news broadcasts.
โJust be careful,โ Ethel said. โBe home on time, or Iโm calling the police.โ
Barb laughed. โIf we get into trouble, it will be with the police.โ Frankie stared at her friend. โComments like that areย notย helpful.โ
โCome on, kid,โ Barb said. โWeโre making like the wind and blowing.โ Ethel hugged Frankie and said, โGo with God, girls. Change the world.โ Frankie followed Barb out to the car and got into the passenger seat.
Barb started the car and cranked up the music on Creedence. Barb turned, smiling. โYou ready?โ
Frankie sighed. Her nerves were strung taut. This whole thing was a mistake. โJust drive, Barbara.โ
It was nearing midnight when they pulled into D.C.
Their destination, Potomac Park, was a black expanse in the middle of the brightly lit city; in the darkness, Frankie could make out tents here and there. The VVAW had occupied the park, turned it into a campground.
โLetโs find a spot off to ourselves,โ Frankie said.
Barb parked the car on the side of the street. โGet the tent out of the trunk.โ
Across the street, a long line of policemen in riot gear stood shoulder to shoulder.
โDonโt say anything,โ Frankie warned as they passed the policemen on their way to the park. โI mean it. I am not getting arrested before the march.โ
Barb gave a curt nod. They came to the edge of the large park. Saying nothingโnot to each other and not to the other VVAW campersโthey pitched their tent, then set up two chairs out front. As they sat in the dark, listening to the din of tent spikes being pounded into the ground, more and more cars drove up, headlights spearing through the night. They heard music in the distance and the quiet buzz of conversations.
โI wonder if we are the only women,โ Frankie said, drinking coffee from a thermos.
Barb sighed. โArenโt we always?โ
In the morning, when Frankie stepped out of the tent, she found herself standing amid a veritable sea of male veteransโthousandsโmost of them about her age, wearing worn, stained fatigues and jeans and boonie hats; some wore peace symbols and carried flags from their states, their units. Hundreds of cars were parked near the park, their doors emblazoned with slogans, convoys from California and Colorado. More had parked on the grass.
As she stood there, a battered, beaten-up school bus drove up onto the grass, stopped, and opened its doors. Veterans exited the bus, singing, โWhatโs it good for? Absolutely nothing!โ
In the center of the park, a bushy-haired man with a bullhorn jumped up into the back of a pickup truck onto which someone had spray-paintedย NO MORE!ย โMy brothers-in-arms, itโs time. Weโre marching to be heard today, weโre raising our voicesโbut not our fists, not our gunsโto say,ย Enough. Bring our soldiers home!ย Line up behind Ron in the wheelchair. A single, unbroken column. Be peaceful. Donโt give the Man any reason to stop us. Letโs go!โ
The men slowly formed a column, led by several veterans in wheelchairs who held flags. Behind them were men on crutches, men with burned faces and missing arms, blind men being led by their friends.
Barb and Frankie were the only two women in the park that they could see. They held hands and joined their brothers on the march across the Lincoln Memorial Bridge.
Vietnam veterans: a river of them, marching and chanting, holding signs in the air.
More men joined them, rushed forward, yelling out slogans, signs raised.
Someone bumped into Frankie so hard that she stumbled sideways, lost her hold on Barbโs hand, and fell to the ground. She yelled โBarb!โ and heard โFrankie!โ but men swarmed in between them.
Frankie couldnโt see her friend in the crowd. โMeet back at the tent!โ she yelled, hoping Barb could hear.
โYou okay, maโam?โ A man helped her to her feet.
He was young, blond, with a scraggly reddish-blond beard and mustache. He held on to her upper arm, steadied her. He wore torn, stained jungle fatigues, with the sleeves cut off. Heโd drawn a huge peace symbol on his helmet. In his other hand, he held a sign that readย VIETNAM VETERANS AGAINST THE WAR.
The protesters kept moving, shoving the two of them forward. โStop the war! Bring them home! Stop the war! Bring them home!โ โYou should move to the side, maโam,โ he said.
Someone jostled Frankie again. She stumbled. โIโm here to march.โ โSorry, lady. This march is for vets. Weโre trying to make a statement.
Hopefully that asshole in the White House will listen to us and stop lying to the country.โ
โIโm a veteran,โ she said.
โOf Vietnam,โ he said impatiently, looking ahead. โI was there.โ
โThere werenโt women in โNam.โ
The chanting grew louder. โStop the war! Bring them home.โ
โIf you didnโt meet someone like me, you were lucky. It meansโโ
โJust move to the side, maโam. This is for the men who were fighting. In combat, you know?โ He disappeared into the moving crowd full of military shirts and bare chests and fatigues. Long hair and Afros and helmets.
What the hell?
So she didnโt belong here, either? โI WAS THERE,โ she screamed in frustration.
She muscled her way forward, melded into the throng of protesters as they crossed the bridge. โStop the war!โ she said, raising her fist. โBring them home!โ Her voice was nothing amid the yelling, but she kept shouting, saying it louder and louder until she was screaming it, screaming at Nixon, at the administration, at the North Vietnamese. The more she shouted, the angrier she became; by the time they reached Arlington National Cemetery with all those white crosses planted in the trimmed green grass, she was furious.
At Arlington Cemetery, policemen moved in to stop a group of black- clad women who carried wreaths.
โTheyโre Gold Star Mothers,โ someone yelled. โLet them through.โ โLet them through, let them through, let them through,โ the crowd
chanted.
The Gold Star Mothers stood outside the entrance to the cemetery in a small clot, all in black, their movements blocked. It seemed they didnโt know where to go. None dropped their floral wreaths.
Gold Star Mothers, women who had lost their sons in Vietnam, being denied the opportunity to put wreaths on their sonsโ graves. One of the mothers looked up, her cheeks lined with tears, and met Frankieโs gaze.
It made her think of her mother and the loss of her brother. Losing Finley had destroyed their family.
How dare the cops haul Gold Star Mothers away from their sonsโ graves?
The mood of the marchers changed. Frankie felt the outrage, the anger.
Frankie joined her voice in the chanting. โLet them in.โ โHell, no, we donโt want your war!โ
A helicopter flew threateningly over the crowd. Frankie heard the familiarย thwop-thwop-thwopย and thought of all the men whoโd died. And she knew that helicopters had guns.
โBring them home!โ she screamed. โEnd the war!โ
Two days later, Frankie and Barb were back in D.C. as hundreds of thousands of protesters poured into the city, coming together from side streets, from parks, from across the bridge; not just veterans anymore. College kids, professors, men and women from all across the country. Women pushing strollers, men with small children on their shoulders.
The denial of the Gold Star Mothers to mourn their sons on the day of the VVAW march had been shown on every news show across America. It had become the perfect visual reminder of how far wrong America had gone on Vietnam: Mothers not allowed to visit their sonsโ graves. Men decimated by the war, torn apart on the battlefield, and forgotten at home.
It wasย wrong.
Frankie had been told often enough by her girlfriends, by Finley, by Jamie, that she was unyielding in her morality, and it was true. Deep down, she was still the good Catholic girl sheโd been in her youth. She believed in good and evil, right and wrong, the dream of America. Who would she be if she chose to look away from the wrongness of this war?
Today, she stood again with Barb on Constitution Avenue, a part of this larger, angrier crowd, two women in a vast sea of people carrying signs, veterans in wheelchairs, raising their fists in anger. This second march on Washington in a week had drawn dozens of anti-war groups; it was to be a massive protest, to last for days, a tidal wave of anti-war sentiment to flood the White House and the Capitol. All of it would be captured by news crews and broadcast into every living room in America.
Barb raised her sign. It readย BRING THE TROOPS HOME NOW!
The Vietnam Veterans Against the War were easily recognizable in their fatigues and patched-up jean jackets and boonie hats, but there were thousands of other protesters: hippies and college kids stood with men in suits and women in dresses. Nuns, priests, doctors, teachers. Anyone with a voice who wanted to demand that Nixon stop the war.
Frankie and Barb held hands as they marched, but this time they understood the risks better and had agreed to meet at a local hotel if they got separated. Barb stuck her sign in the air, yelled, โBring them home, bring them home!โ
The marchers came to a stop at the Capitol steps, pressed in together, shoulder to shoulder. Men raised their voices and their signs, yelling, โStop the war! Bring them home!โ while television news crews filmed it all.
A man with long hair, wearing fatigues, stepped forward, stood alone for a moment. The crowd fell silent.
A wave of anticipation swept through the VVAW group, and then something flew through the air from the protest crowd, sailed over the barricade, and landed on the Capitol steps with aย clink,ย glinted in a ray of sunlight.
A war medal.
One by one, veterans stepped forward, stood alone, ripped medals off of their chests, and threw them, clanging, onto the steps. Purple Hearts, Bronze Stars, Good Conduct Medals, dog tags. Some hit the steps and clanked against the sudden silence of the crowd. Barb let go of Frankie,
pushed her way to the front of the crowd, and threw her first lieutenantโs bars onto the steps.
Police in riot gearโhelmeted, with plastic shields upโarrived in a blare of whistles. They charged the crowd, began hauling the protesters away.
The crowd broke up; pandemonium filled the streets.
Frankie was knocked off her feet, fell hard. In the confusion, she curled into a small ball and rolled away, trying to protect herself from both protesters and police. She edged toward the chain-link fence barricade and lay there, panting, feeling bruised. Tear gas floated through the air, stung Frankieโs eyes, and blurred her vision until she could barely see.
How long did she lie there, blinking, her eyes on fire? She didnโt know.
Slowly, she got to her feet, trying to focus. The street was full of police in riot gear, hauling protesters away, cars honking, driving away, news vans following.
Half-blind, Frankie stumbled forward, unable to quite comprehend everything sheโd just seen, the deep and utter wrongness of it. The street was littered with cigarette butts, protest brochures, broken signs, ripped-up draft cards.
On the steps of the Capitol, behind the temporary chain-link fencing, hundreds of medals glittered in the sunlight. Medals that had cost each recipient so much, thrown away in protest.
A lone policeman began picking them up. What would happen to them, the medals men had sacrificed and bled for?
Frankie grabbed the chain-link fence, shook it hard. โDonโt you touch those!โ
A man grabbed her by the arm. โDonโt,โ he said. โTheyโll arrest you.โ
She tried to pull free. โI donโt care.โ Suddenly she was furious. How dare the American government do these things to her own citizens; stop mothers from honoring their fallen sons, ignore the meaning of a medal thrown through the air? She wiped her eyes again, tried to clear her vision. โThey shouldnโt be allowed to touch those medals.โ
โThe vets made their point. A damn good one,โ the man said. โThat image will stay with people: a vet in a wheelchair throwing his Purple Heart away? Powerful, man.โ
Frankie pulled back, wrenched her arm free. The man whoโd stopped her wasnโt what she expected. In the first place, he was older than most of
the protesters, certainly older than most of the Vietnam vets. Long dark hair fell in feathery layers almost to his shoulders and was threaded through with gray. A thick mustache covered his upper lip. He wore round John Lennon sunglasses, but even so she could see how green his eyes were.
โYouโre a Vietnam vet?โ she said, trying to find her calm again. All of this had upset her, dredged up emotions she didnโt want to feel. She had to dial it back. And fast. Loosing her Vietnam emotions was never good.
โNo. Just someone whoโs against the war. Henry Acevedo.โ He held out his hand.
She shook it distractedly. โFrankie McGrath. Did you have a son in Vietnam?โ
He laughed. โIโm notย thatย old. Iโm here for the same reason you are: to say enough is goddamn enough.โ
โYeah. Well. Thanks, Henry.โ Frankie walked away. Henry fell into step beside her.
โDo you think these protests will do any good?โ she asked. โWe have to try,โ was his answer.
Yeah,ย Frankie thought,ย itโs true.ย Sheโd seen people hauled away by the police today, risking their freedom to protest a war many of them hadnโt even fought. Civilians were being arrested for exercising the fundamental American right to protest their government; at Kent State and in Jackson, theyโd been shot for it.
She didnโt know if protesting and marching and making signs could actually effect change, but she damn sure knew that America wasnโt preserving democracy or fighting communism in Vietnam, and it certainly wasnโt winning. Ultimately too many lives would be lost in pursuit of nothing.
โCan I buy you a drink?โ Henry asked.
Frankie had almost forgotten the older man was with her; sheโd been lost in the wilds of her own past. Theyโd walked almost two blocks together. She stopped, looked at him.
Long, wild hair, bright green eyes, lines that hinted at sorrow, a nose that looked as if it had been broken more than once. Worn, faded Leviโs, a Rolling Stones T-shirt. Sandals. He looked like a Berkeley philosophy professor.
โWhy?โ
He shrugged. โWhy not? I feel โฆ bereft, I guess. That was tough to watch.โ
What man used the wordย bereft?
โAre you a philosophy professor? Or a surfer, maybe?โ
โGood guess. Psychiatrist. And yeah, I surf. Grew up in La Jolla. Thatโs in Southern California.โ
Frankie smiled. โIโm a Coronado Island girl. My brother and I used to surf Trestles and Blackโs Beach.โ
โSmall world.โ
Frankie felt a kinship with him. She liked that he was a surfer, that he knew Trestles, and that he was here, standing against a war heโd had no part in. โI could use a drink. Iโm supposed to meet my girlfriend at the Hay Adams. We got separated.โ
They turned in tandem, heading toward the hotel.
Across the street, a small table had been positioned beneath a banner that readย DONโT LET THEM BE FORGOTTEN.
At the table, behind stacks of anti-war flyers, two long-haired men with unruly sideburns sat in folding chairs. โHey, lady, want to buy a bracelet and help bring a POW home?โ
Frankie walked over to the table, looked down at a cardboard box full of silver metal bracelets.
โTheyโre five bucks apiece,โ the guy behind the table said.
Frankie pulled one of the bracelets out. It was a thin silver cuff, with
MAJ ROBERT WELCH 1โ16โ1967ย engraved on it.
โWeโre a student organization,โ one of the kids said. โWeโre raising money. We work with the League of POW/MIA Families. Itโs a new organization.โ
โLeague of Families?โ Frankie asked.
โNavy wives, mostly, fighting to bring their husbands home. Thereโs a fundraiser in town next week, if youโd like to join the effort. Hereโs a flyer. They need donations.โ
Frankie took the flyer, handed the guy ten dollars, and put the bracelet
on.
She and Henry walked to the hotel, passed a worried-looking doorman
who seemed ready to stop them, but didnโt. They went downstairs, into the sexy basement bar where it was rumored that much of the countryโs
governing decisions were made by men drinking martinis. They chose a booth in the back; he ordered a beer, she a gin martini. On the table in front of them, a pair of coasters showed a caricature of President Nixon. Frankie realized her hands were shaking so she lit up a cigarette.
The bartender brought over a small bowl full of homemade potato chips.
She sipped her drink, which helped to ease the slight tremor in her hands. Her eyes still stung, but her vision had cleared. Cigarette smoke wafted between them. Someone in here was smoking a cigar, too.
โWho did you lose to Vietnam?โ Henry asked.
She put down her glass. There was something in the way he looked at her, a quiet compassion, maybe, a depth of caring she was unused to. โItโs a long list.โ
โA brother?โ
โHe was the first. Yeah. But โฆ there were โฆ others.โ
He said nothing more but didnโt look away. She had a feeling he saw more than most people. The silence became unnerving.
โI was there,โ she said in a soft voice, surprising herself with the admission.
โI see the pin,โ he said. โYour caduceus. Wings. Youโre a nurse. Iโve heard stories about women like you.โ
โHow? No one talks about the war. No one who was there, anyway.โ
โI treat a few vets in my practice. Alcoholics, addicts, mostly. Do you have nightmares, Frankie? Trouble sleeping?โ
Before Frankie could answerโdeflectโBarb showed up, panting and out of breath. She slid into the booth, bumped Frankie hard. โDid you see us throw the medals? That will make the news.โ She raised a hand to the bartender, yelled, โRum and Coke.โ
Henry was already sliding out of the booth, standing. He looked down at Frankie. โIt was nice to meet you, Frankie. How do I find you?โ he asked too quietly for Barb to hear.
โSorry, Henry. I donโt think Iโm ready to be found.โ
He touched her shoulder gently. โTake care of yourself.โ Did he give those words a weight?
โWho was that?โ Barb asked, reaching for a potato chip. โOne of your dadโs friends?โ
โHeโs not that old,โ Frankie said, staring down at the new silver bracelet she wore. With a fingertip, she traced the engraving. The major had gone missing three months before Frankie landed in Vietnam. While she was at Fort Sam Houston, not learning enough to deploy.
How many prisoners of war were there? And why were they never in the news?
โFrankie?โ Barb said, finishing her drink. โWhat is it? Memories? Do you need to talk?โ
Frankie looked up. โIโm glad we marched. You were right.โ
Barb smiled. โGirlfriend, I am always right. You know that by now.โ โBut I think we can do more.โ