Read Death Coming Up the Hill Online
Authors: Chris Crowe
digging ditches with
Â
burned-out war vets in
a hundred-ten-degree heat
the rest of your life.”
â
  â
  â
Working with Reuben
changed how I read the weekly
casualty reports.
Â
He'd seen buddies shipped
home in body bags. He'd been
splattered by their blood.
Â
He'd heard their panicked
cries and choking death sobs. He'd
lived through the carnage
Â
and knew some of the
four hundred and eight men who
died last week. To me
Â
they were part of an
abstract number, but to him
they were real flesh-and-
Â
blood men sacrificed
on the altar of war. I
tried to make it real,
Â
but to me and most
Americans, the men who
died were just part of
Â
a tragic count that
changed each week. By the end of
the summer, when I
Â
read the casualty
reports, I remembered the
haunted, wounded look
Â
on Reuben's face when
he talked about the war, and
I earnestly hoped
Â
Kelly wasn't part
of the tragic tally of
dead in Vietnam.
September 1968
Week Thirty-Six: 195
Â
The Democrats named
Hubert Humphrey as their man
to face Nixon in
Â
November, but their
convention exposed all the
conflict in the world
Â
today. Protests in
Chicago led to police
violence that seemed
Â
un-American.
Trouble also exploded
in Paris, Prague, and
Â
cities everywhere.
It wasn't just Vietnam;
the world had gone nuts.
â
  â
  â
The first day of school
felt simultaneously
new and old. Students
Â
jammed the halls, buzzing
and bragging about all their
summer adventures.
Â
My summer had been
a bummer I didn't feel
like sharing at school,
Â
and looking around,
I wondered how many kids
were walking wounded
Â
like me. Our summer
scars didn't show, but the pain
and damage lingered.
Â
Angela met me
at my locker; we held hands
and walked to Mr.
Â
Ruby's room. When he
saw us, he grinned a welcome
and told us to choose
Â
our own seats, so we
claimed the same desks as last year
and waited for class.
Â
“One ninety-five” was
written on the board, and I
knew that his new course,
Â
Contemporary
Civilization, would deal
with today's real life.
September 1968
Week Thirty-Seven: 217
Â
My father nagged me
to leave Mom, to move in with
him, but I knew I
Â
couldn't abandon
her, especially so near
to the baby's birth.
Â
He tried bribery,
legal coercion, even
intimidation
Â
to convince me, but
that stuff just shoved us further
and further apart.
Â
I did agree to
meet him for lunch at Pete's Fish
and Chips one Sunday
Â
after school started.
He looked like he hadn't slept
well for a long time.
Â
I got my food, sat
facing him, and prepared to
listen to his pitch.
Â
He made it clear that
reconciliation was
out of the question.
Â
“I know our marriage
was broken, Ashe. Your mother
and I haven't seen
Â
eye to eye on much
of anything since you were
born, but we tried to
Â
hold it together
for your sake.” He blinked back tears.
“But this betrayal
Â
is more than I can
bear. She has shamed me and you
and herself, and you
Â
have no ideaâ
no idea at allâhow
much this has wounded
Â
me. I'm going to
fight for you, and I'm going
to make her pay for
Â
what she has done. She
doesn't deserve either one
of us anymore,
Â
and I'll spend my last
dime to make sure that she and
her bastard baby
Â
are completely cut
off. She's made her bed; she can
sleep in it.” He leaned
Â
back and stared at me.
“It's going to be scorched earth,
son, no prisoners,
Â
all or nothingâand
you are going to be with
me or against me.”
September 1968
Week Thirty-Eight: 290
Â
It started late on
Monday night. I heard Mom cry
out in pain. Then she
Â
yelled for me to get
ready to drive her to the
hospital. She'd talked
Â
me through all this in
advance, but something about
it scared the hell out
Â
of me. I checked on
her, then went to the garage,
started the car, and
Â
battled the panic
while I waited. When she got
into the car, pain
Â
sparked off her, and she
panted and sweated like she
was going to melt.
Â
“Should I call someone?”
I asked. She shook her head. “It's
better this way. He'll
Â
find out soon enough.
Now hurry up, unless you
want this baby to
Â
be born in the front
seat.” By the time we got to
the emergency
Â
entrance, sweat soaked my
tee shirt, and my hands trembled
like an old man's. They
Â
whisked Mom away, and
I staggered to the waiting
room to worry and
Â
wait. It was after
midnight, so nothing was on
the TV. I leafed
Â
through old magazines
to stay calm, but with every
passing minute, the
Â
worry cranked up a
notch. And then anger started
edging around the
Â
worry. The peacenik
should have been there, not me. He
should have driven Mom
Â
to the hospital
while she twisted and groaned with
labor pains. I stared
Â
at the clock. If I
had known his name and number,
I would have dropped a
Â
dime in the pay phone
and called him to demand that
he come to fix this
Â
mess he started, to
take responsibility
for Mom and their new
Â
baby. But all I
could do was sit and sulk and
worry. Before long,
Â
a nurse walked in. “Ashe
Douglas?” I couldn't read her
face. Was something wrong
Â
with Mom? The baby?
I stood up, and she looked at
me with surprise. “You're
Â
the brother?” Then, “Well,
congratulations. You have
a baby sister.”
September 1968
Week Thirty-Nine: 247
Â
“Miscegenation,”
the topic of the day in
Mr. Ruby's class.
Â
Arizona had
only recently dropped its
laws against inter-
Â
racial marriage, he
said, but many states still clung
to their old statutes.
Â
Dad was like those states,
still hanging on to racist
traditions and hate.
Â
I slumped in my desk
and shoved those thoughts out of my
head. I didn't want
Â
to deal with it then,
even though it was staring
me right in the face.
October 1968
Week Forty: 247
Â
Mom named the baby
Rosa, and the first time my
little sister grabbed
Â
my finger with her
tiny hand, she grabbed my heart,
too. Something about
Â
that flooded me with
love, and I was surprised by
the spontaneous
Â
flow of tears that leaked
down my cheeks. She was perfect,
beautifulâand black.
Â
The first time I saw
her, she was still so wrinkled
and baby-new, and
Â
I was so rattled
with relief that she and Mom
had survived birth that
Â
I didn't even
think about her shiny black
hair and beautiful
Â
brown skin. I didn't
even think about what Dad
would say or do. I
Â
didn't even think
about the gossip that would
spread about my mom.
Â
Seeing my baby
sister, my only thoughts were
about how much I
Â
loved her, how I would
always love her, and nothing
anybody said
Â
or did, even Dad,
could change how I felt about
my precious sister.
October 1968
Week Forty-One: 167
Â
The very real weight
of responsibility
pressed on me from all
Â
sides after Rosa's
birth. I wanted to fight for
her and Mom, but I
Â
knew the minefield of
divorce would be treacherous,
unpredictable,
Â
and terrifying.
My parents' war paralleled
the violence in
Â
Vietnam, and I
dreaded, truly dreaded that
I might be called on
Â
to fight in both wars
at once. I laugh now when I
remember how I
Â
once believed that a
sweet, innocent baby like
Rosa might mend our
Â
fractured family,
but when Dad finally heard
about her, he swore
Â
he'd ruin Mom and
make sure her black bastard would
rot in foster care.
Â
He must not have known
that when he attacked Mom, I'd
stand in the crossfire.
October 1968
Week Forty-Two: 100
Â
Thursday, Angela
came over and we watched the
Olympic highlights
Â
while we baby-sat
Rosa for Mom. Sometimes I
think Angela loves
Â
Rosa almost as
much as I do. She calls her
“little soul sister,”
Â
and she always wants
to hold her. Baby Rosa
took to her right off,
Â
and I must admit
that it used to make me feel
kind of jealous to
Â
see Rosa cuddle
up to a stranger more than
she did to me. But
Â
Angela's glow burned
off that jealousy pretty
fast, and it wasn't
Â
long before I loved
how happy my soul sisters
looked with each other.
â
  â
  â
It surprised no one
that American sprinters
Tommie Smith and John
Â
Carlos finished first
and third in the two-hundred
meter; what shocked and
Â
infuriated
people was what they did at
the nationally
Â
televised medal
ceremony. While the “Star
Spangled Banner” played,
Â
both men lowered their
heads and raised black-gloved fists in
a bold Black Power
Â
salute. People booed
and hissed, but the two men took
the abuse in proud,
Â
stony silence. Next
to me, Angela whispered,
“Right on. You look at
Â
that, little girl. Just
look at what those two brothers
are doing for you.”
October 1968
Week Forty-Three: 109
Â
The casualties
over in Vietnam slowed;
the carnage at home
Â
increased. Dad filed for
divorce and hired a big-shot
attorney to sue
Â
for custody. Not
Rosa's, of course. Mine. He claimed
that Mom was unfit
Â
to be my mother,
and he wanted to force me
to live with him and
Â
to leave Rosa and
Mom all alone to fend for
themselves. Mom tried to
Â
hide it from me, but
when I came home from school, she
was sitting in the
Â
living room, Rosa
on her lap, and an opened
letter at her feet.
Â
She'd been crying, but
she sat, still as death, staring
at the letter. “It's
Â
getting nasty, Ashe,
nastier than I thought it
would ever get.” Then
Â
her voice caught, and the
tears started again. Rosa
sensed her mom's heartbreak