Sunrise Over Fallujah (4 page)

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Authors: Walter Dean Myers

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BOOK: Sunrise Over Fallujah
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“Yeah, that's about it,” Johnson said. “I hope this mess is over before we get into it. If you people hear about any parties, let us know.”

“You got thirty-two trucks and about how many dudes and dudettes?” Jonesy asked.

“What's a dudette?” Johnson asked.

“Girl dudes,” Jonesy said.

“Girl dudes? Okay.” Johnson had a nice smile. “We got sixty-six
people
, little man. Each truck got a driver and an alternate. I can drive anything that got more than two wheels.”

The third woman in their group leaned against Evans's Humvee. Sometimes she smiled but she didn't say anything. It was a funny trio: a sister, a tiny blonde, and a dark-haired girl who could have been Spanish.

“Y'all get your ROE cards?” the blonde asked.

“What's that?” I asked.

“They gave us these Rules of Engagement cards saying who we supposed to shoot and stuff,” she said. “I can't figure out what they mean when they talking ‘bout ‘Happy Shooting.' ”

She passed a card over to Jonesy. He read it, shaking his head slightly as he did, and then handed it back to the blonde.

“According to what I was told, when these people get happy they shoot off their pistols or AK-47s into the air,” Jonesy said. “When they do that, we're not supposed to shoot at them.”

“Let me see that card?” Marla asked.

The blonde handed it over. “Where you from?” she asked.

“New York,” Marla said. “Not from the black part, like Birdy, though. Okay, rule six in the Rules of Engagement. Expect ‘Happy Shooting' from the local populace. This shooting is not hostile and should not be responded to as such.”

“So if some guy's smiling and shooting in the air,” Jonesy said, “it's okay. But then he lowers it a little bit and he's still smiling while he's lighting your ass up, then you can shoot back?”

“It depends,” Marla said. “How big is his smile?”

“Five-Oh-Seven!” a captain called out. “Let's go! Let's go!”

The Five-Oh-Seven women piled back into their vehicles and started lining up for refueling. Their trucks were huge and I tried to imagine the little blonde behind the wheel.

We didn't finish fueling up and loading extra fuel cans into the back of the Humvee until late. Captain Coles told us to go bunk down for the night and be ready to leave for the border the
first thing in the morning. He had just finished telling us that when a command vehicle pulled up and gave him new orders.

“Okay, guys, mount up! We've got hearts and minds to win!”

We were on our way to Iraq.

Third squad took the lead. Captain Coles rode with them. Second squad with Sergeant Harris, Eddie Evans, and Jean Darcy came next. Two vehicles with medical personnel and Intelligence Ops followed; our squad pulled up the rear.

We traveled across country for a while headed for Highway 1 and started past a long line of MP vehicles. Some Kuwaiti workers waved us off. We waved back. Jonesy was hunched over the wheel, trying to adjust his seat belt by wiggling his butt.

I wasn't exactly scared. My mouth was dry, the way it felt before a big game or an important test in high school. But I was going to be doing something I had never done before. I was going to be in a war.

We rode deep into the night and into the early morning. The Kuwaiti desert, in spots, was beautiful. The rising sun spread like a brilliant egg flattening out. A distance away, we could see small dust storms changing the colors that played along the edge of the horizon. I remembered part of a song by Bob Marley.

Check out the real situation

Nation war against nation

Where did it all begin?

When will it end?

We were in the longest line of vehicles I could ever imagine. It extended as far in front of us as it did behind. Periodically we were stopped for identification check. Once, when a Military Police officer thought we were with the 352
nd
Civil Affairs Battalion, we were told we were going the wrong way.

“We're attached to the Third.” Captain Coles looked over the MP's organization table and found us listed. “Civil Affairs detachment Alpha. Right there.”

The Brits were going into Iraq toward Basrah and we were swinging around to get behind the American forces. We went south toward Camp Virginia and then west from there. We were told to pull over and dismount as it grew dark. There was already a makeshift camp in the desert and we pulled into it. Captain Coles told us to inspect the vehicles but nobody was thinking about the Humvees, only the sounds of the big guns booming in the distance. The vibrations from the heavy weapons traveled through the air and I could feel something deep inside my bowels react every time there was an explosion. The scent of gasoline mixed with the smell of sulfur in the warm air.

“Birdy, how far are we away from Iraq?” Marla's face was caked in sand from her nose down. Her eyes and forehead, covered by her goggles and helmet, were clean.

“We could make it there in a couple of hours,” I said. “Easy. You want to shake this joint and bust on in?”

“No, what I want you to do is to explain to me who they're
shooting at. I thought the Iraqis would be too shocked and awed to fight,” Marla said.

We had to eat MREs, the packaged food we had brought along. I still wasn't hungry.

“Makes me feel like a big boy,” Jonesy said. He took off his Molle vest and flopped on the ground, using his helmet as a backrest. Captain Coles told us to stay together and be ready to move out on a moment's notice.

“And don't sleep under the Humvees,” he said. “Years ago, in my father's unit, some guys were sleeping under their trucks and when they moved out in the middle of the night they were run over.”

“So, Captain, why don't you tell us again what we're going to be doing in sunny Iraq,” Jonesy asked as Harris, decked out like a gunslinger from a cowboy picture, came over.

“What we're going to be doing,” Coles said, “is testing some of the theories that the PSYOP people think will work. We'll go and smile and ask the people what they need and see how they react. They think they'll be slow to react because they don't want to get killed. But if they don't react right away and we're genuinely helpful to them, then we'll be able to keep them from the battle.”

“And the 352
nd
? That's a whole battalion of Civil Affairs specialists,” Marla said. “How come they're headed to Kuwait City instead of to Baghdad?”

“I promised the guys at the mall in Kuwait City I'd send them some business,” Jonesy said. “So I sent the 352
nd
.”

“Part four of the program is the most important part,” Captain Coles said. “If we just go in and take out their weapons of mass destruction and their regime, then we're just tough guys. But if we go in there and take out their desire to fight us and help them build their own democracy, then we're heroes.”

“That's the theory, anyway,” Darcy said. She had cut her hair short and looked like a boy with her helmet off. “My great-grandmother doesn't care two figs for theories, so that's another thing I can't tell her.”

“There's a lot of theory going on in this war,” Coles said. “Theories about what we can do, how the equipment is going to stand up, and how the Iraqis are going to act. If it all works, then this is going to be a textbook war. The big brass doesn't want an established Civil Affairs unit to fail so we're like an advance scouting party. We're testing the water, so to speak.”

It sounded good. I knew that Coles was sincere. He wanted to do well, to serve his country, but he didn't want to sound too gung ho.

We were up and mounted before daybreak and were on our way. We reached the border area at 0600 hours. There were hundreds of Kuwaiti soldiers and American engineers at the border. They had filled in the anti-tank traps and had made a path across the border into Iraq.

“From now on, every time you get into your vehicle you're going to be on high alert,” Coles said through the radio hookup. “Combat locks on at all times. Don't let anybody approach your vehicle. Good luck.”

I didn't feel anything special as we were waved into line to cross from Kuwait into Iraq. I remembered an orientation booklet the navy had passed around talking about how Iraq was known as the cradle of civilization. We were headed into Babylon and were excited.

“Yo, Birdy!” Marla's voice crackled in the intercom.

“What?”

“Check out that line of green on your left,” she said.

Me and Jonesy looked over and saw some civilians laying something in a neat line on the ground. “What is it?” Jonesy asked.

“Body bags,” Marla said. “Welcome to Iraq.”

I could feel my heart beat faster as we crossed
the border into Iraq. Marla's pointing out the body bags didn't help it slow down. We were still in convoy formation, with vehicles stretched out forever.

The way I understood it, the Marines were going in first, pushing aside any resistance. Then the 3
rd
Infantry Division came behind and secured the positions and established Lines of Communication. In some places they would switch and the 3
rd
ID would go in first and the Marines would follow. It was a kick-ass operation that ran by the numbers. Move in, take the position and establish a Forward Operating Base, then secure the Lines of Communication back to the jump-off point. That's what the sister with the 507
th
was doing, making sure that the Forward Operating Base was supplied.

“Piece of cake,” Captain Coles said. “Just check off the boxes as you go along.”

“We need to hook up the television set as soon as possible,” Marla said. “So we can get the scores. So far I think it's the Coalition one, the Iraqis zero.”

The breaks in traveling came at odd times; whenever anything was happening a mile or two up the road we stopped so we could all move as a unit. It was nearly seven thirty in the evening, and the sun had already gone down, when we were told to pull over and set up a bivouac area.

Marla made a big deal of setting up the television and even convinced Sergeant Harris to hold up the antenna. After turning the antenna around a bit we finally got CNN. They were interviewing a round-faced marine.

“I know we're facing a war on terror and we have to make sacrifices to overcome a determined foe and rid the world of weapons of mass destruction, and I'm willing to do my part…”

“If he said he was scared out of his mind he wouldn't get on television,” Marla said.

“If they stick a camera in my face I'm going to say the same thing that marine said,” Jonesy said. “I ain't never been on television before!”

The newscaster gave the name and city the marine was from. Then they switched to a newscaster who looked like he was on a balcony. There were explosions in the background and he was flinching as he tried to describe the scene.

“You think the bombs are hitting anybody?” Marla said. “I don't see any bodies laying around.”

That was true. They were still talking about shock and awe and how many bombs were falling around Baghdad but they weren't showing any casualties. I didn't want to see any, either.

We had parked our Humvee off the road and bedded down around it. The night was hot and we were all sweating. I smelled something bad and thought it was Jonesy but then realized it was me. I thought about getting up and washing, but I was too tired.

“We're moving out!” Captain Coles was yelling into the tent. I heard him, but nothing he said made sense. Somehow I got into a vertical position, found the tent flap, and walked out into the brilliant desert morning. There was already a small line in front of the latrine tent so I trailed off toward the back of the squad tents and peed on the ground. I saw Harris across from me. He was making sure that everybody saw his business. Yeah. Sure.

We packed our gear, policed the area, and loaded our extra equipment into the supply vehicle. Jean Darcy came by carrying a plastic tray with her breakfast on it. I saw scrambled eggs, sausages, and potatoes.

“You like people?” she asked, looking up at me.

“Yeah, I guess,” I said.

“Jerk!”

Strange chicks joined the army, I thought. Strange and strong.

I looked at my watch. It was only five o'clock. How could anybody be so pissed that early?

Captain Coles came by and told us that we were moving out in thirty minutes.

“You know where we're headed?”

“Dunkin' Donuts in Baghdad,” he said.

I looked around for Darcy to tell her no, that I didn't like people. I didn't find Darcy, but I found Marla helping Jonesy adjust the straps of his vest.

“Hey, look at that sunrise,” she said.

I looked to where she was nodding and saw the sun on the horizon and above it a thin red line that stretched endlessly in the distance. There was also sand, rising like a shadow with shifting shades of dark brown and orange, coming toward us. Cameras were brought out and guys stepped away from the trucks to get clear pictures.

“Jonesy, check this out!” Sergeant Harris called out. He had put a bayonet on the end of his weapon and was holding it up so that Jonesy could photograph him in profile. Sergeant Harris. American hero.

The sandstorm blew nearer and the sky suddenly darkened. The sand, swirling through the hot air, blocked out everything.

By the time the sand hit us it was coming from every direction. There was no place to turn. The fine grains stung my flesh and went into my nose, my mouth. I was breathing sand, inhaling sand, coughing, trying to spit.

“Get down! Cover up!” I recognized Major Sessions's voice. When had she shown up? I found a spot against the wheel of a Humvee and squatted. I thought about my goggles and tried to pull them down but my face was already covered with the fine grit and stinging in a thousand places.

Somebody yelled for us to cover our weapons. I got my goggles down and tried to open my eyes. There was sand on my eyelids; I thought I heard scratching as I opened and closed them.

We settled into the storm. We were not the winners. After the first few minutes of cowering near whatever stable object we could find, we just stayed put and hoped we would outlive it.

I did not want to be here. I thought of the places I could be: Harlem, Philadelphia, Chicago. I did not want to be in Iraq.

The sandstorm lasted two days. Two days of misery and wanting to die. When it ended we were all a mess. There was grit in every piece of gear and caked onto our skin.

“This crap doesn't even wash off!” Marla complained.

“God sent down some shock and awe and you guys folded,” Jonesy said.

“And what did you do that was so great?” Captain Coles asked.

“I wrote a song,” Jonesy said. “I call it ‘I Hate Your Mother Worse Than I Hate This Sand Blues.' You want to hear it?”

Nobody wanted to hear it.

I rinsed my mouth out with a mixture of water and baking soda we got from the medical people. By the time I had done it three
times and couldn't feel the grit in my mouth anymore, the squad had the television on.

We watched the news and found out the navy had sent more missiles into Iraq. Buildings exploded in flames and thick black smoke disappeared into the night skies over Baghdad.

In between the bombing coverage and the shots of ground targets being bracketed and then destroyed, there were images of cheering Iraqis.

“They know why we're here,” Sergeant Harris said. “They probably don't know what it means to be really free, but they can sense it. You know what I mean?”

“Then again,” Coles said, “if they weren't cheering, would they be on television?”

Marla's head snapped up and she looked at Captain Coles. I couldn't tell what she was thinking.

We spent hours cleaning the sand out of our gear, out of our ears, our weapons, our uniforms, and the Humvees. We had to test everything to see if it worked. Lieutenant Nelson, one of the intelligence guys, had an expensive camera and had tried to take photos of the sun through the sandstorm. His camera didn't work at all anymore; he spent an hour cursing at it.

We were back on the road headed north when we got the news about the first confirmed casualties. The 507
th
, the same crew we had talked to just before the dust storm, had bought it big-time.

“They had at least five killed and a bunch captured north of Highway One,” Captain Coles said. “They got hit around some place called An Nasiriyah.”

“How do you know some of them were captured?” I asked.

“They were on Al Jazeera, the Arabic station,” Captain Coles said. “There were feeds to CNN, all the stations. The Iraqis have three of the women.”

“Crap! We were just talking to them the other day,” Jonesy said.

Marla exhaled heavily, blinked hard, and looked away from us.

This scared the living crap out of me. I thought about the women we met from the 507
th
and wondered if they were the ones who had been captured. I couldn't imagine someone pointing a weapon at me while I begged for my life. I couldn't think about it—that was all I thought about.

More news about the 507
th
trickled in. There were at least a half dozen killed, probably more.

At 1100 we were told to pull over to the side of the road, that we were standing down until further orders.

At 1130 we were told we might be moving back to Kuwait, to hook up with the 422
nd
Civil Affairs.

“What's going on?” Harris asked. I could see he was getting jumpy.

“The best laid plans of mice and men…” Captain Coles said. “CENTCOM is trying to figure out what happened to the 507
th
. They were supposed to be in a safe area. Now they're rechecking
the Lines of Communication to figure out just what is safe and what's not.”

“Was the 507
th
moving too fast?” Marla asked.

“I don't know, we'll have to check it out on the news.”

Somebody had painted the television in the supply truck in desert camouflage colors. We took it out, hooked up an antenna, and tried to get the news. The only thing we got was static and some ghosts; some officers from the 3
rd
had a set that was working and they let us come and watch the news. We saw the captured guys from the 507
th
. They faced the television camera, but their eyes were looking around the room. They looked absolutely terrified.

“What are they looking at?” Marla asked.

It was what we were all thinking.

One of the soldiers, pale, wide-eyed, could hardly sit up. The Iraqis who held him kept asking him questions. The black woman who looked like Queen Latifah, who had been so funny when she was talking with us at the refueling station, was shaking. Her eyes were wide and darting around the room. My stomach tightened as she answered questions about where she was from in the States.

God, please don't let them be killed.

Somebody said it was chow time but Captain Coles came in and told us to mount up. “Eat something on the way if you can. We have orders to head toward An Nasiriyah,” he said. “There's still a lot of heavy fighting going on there, but they want our Civil Affairs
unit in place as quickly as possible. I don't think anybody anticipated POWs so early in the game.”

“So we're going to look for them?” I asked.

“The theory is that if any Iraqis are going to give over the POWs, or tell us where we can find them, it'll probably be to somebody who is treating them decently,” Coles said. “Hopefully, that'll be us. They're sending a Bradley with us for protection. I'll be briefed on the way. That kid Ahmed from Cleveland who speaks Arabic is going to ride with First squad, and you'll be right behind the Bradley. Stay in touch with each other and stay alert. Kennedy, you don't have to go if you don't want to.”

“Bull!” Marla said.

Coles looked at her, then nodded and headed toward the Bradley.

We started moving out at 1315 hours. We took a position behind the Bradley fighting vehicle, a big tank-looking affair with a mounted cannon.

Ahmed, the interpreter, found us. He had been around but not hanging out with the regular troops. He was thin, dark-haired but light-skinned. He could have been Latino. He shook hands all around and Jonesy asked him how he had learned Arabic.

“My family is from Lebanon,” he said with a shrug. “My grandmother made me learn it.”

An Nasiriyah was less than two hours north according to the maps. We started off and matched our speed with the Bradley. Second squad was behind us with two male medics. I
wondered if the two women on the medical team had wanted to stay behind.

The day was white brilliant. Inside our vehicle we were quiet. We watched everything on the road. The road itself was a little wider than two lanes. Someone from the Bradley called back to us and told us that the shoulders were soft. Jonesy was riding right down the middle. Occasionally an Iraqi vehicle flew by and we could see the Bradley's big gun train on it.

As we neared An Nasiriyah, the traffic picked up. We were passing people in fields, some in carts. In the distance we heard the sounds of fighting. Automatic fire, big guns, explosions, and a steady chorus of small arms fire. Once in a while there would be a brief lull and then it would start again.

“Air support!” Marla called down. “Two o'clock! Twelve o'clock! Wow!”

Jonesy and I tried to look up out of the right window but the jets had already streaked by. They were really low and the boom made us all jump. I felt a pain in my hand and saw that I was clutching the door lock. I let it go and wiped my hand on my pants leg.

We rolled through the outskirts of An Nasiriyah and into a section of town. The low two-story buildings were painted white or pale green. Dark smoke bellowed from one of them; another was burning. The smell was terrible. I couldn't see any smoke near me but I knew it was all around, making it hard to breathe. Soldiers on the ground formed a ring behind a string of Humvees,
Bradleys, and some big trucks with what looked like communication gear. My heart was beating fast. I hoped I didn't look scared.

We stopped, got out, and moved to where Captain Coles was signaling us. He was standing next to an officer with white hair who reminded me of my homeroom teacher in high school. I saw the bird on his collar, which meant that he was a colonel.

“We're doing a house-to-house search in this area,” the colonel said. He pointed toward the row of buildings directly in front of us. “This is a Shiite area, so they're mostly friendlies, but you can't be sure. Captain, get your medical people just to walk through. See if anybody needs first aid. Do a little smiling at them. They told our translators they didn't know anything about our POWs, but we're not going to leave much of a force here, so we need to win a few hearts and minds in a hurry.”

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