A Qantas 707. âShit! This is the way to go to war,' said Harry.
Sleep a little. Wake up after a short while, check my pistol. Most illegalâhalf the units carrying their own. Beretta 7.65 mmâjust in case. Only a pro would have his own pistol. Sleep. Bye-bye kids and parks. We'll protect you.
REMEMBER the bus, chartered, seemed all a bit unmilitary, but what the hell anyway, your mate Charlie had come out to see you off.
âTake care of yourself, you skinny shit.'
âMake sure they're all dead when I get there.'
âDon't drink all the piss over there.'
It had dawned on you as you pulled your greatcoat collar up around your ears that you were going to war. Noâit had dawned on you a few days earlier when you were slumped on your bed in Room 17 and for a moment you were scared. âShit,' you thought, âyou're a pro. Pro's don't get scared, and if they do they certainly don't show it.'
You remembered that someone had said that more people die in road accidents in Australia than get killed in Vietnam. That was reassuring. You told yourself that you didn't need reassuring, you were a proâyou'd jumped out of planes, climbed cliffs, had wings on your sleeveâyou were better than the rest of them already; you could take it; what the hell anyway.
You hoped that the bitch who hadn't written to you for weeks would miss you when you were gone. She'd writeâshe'd wake up to the fact that you were a man and that you were the type of man who would look after her and protect her etc.
Remember when you got to the airport, seven days' pre-embarkation leave, that's what it said on the leave pass, you had to stand in the queue and wait to check your baggage in, but you didn't. You knew that they were only civilians, and you somehow felt better than themâsuperiorâyou were protecting them. Luggage checked in. âGo for a walk, eh?' Yeah, let's have a bit of a stroll around the place. Strain your ears when you walk past groups of people; they knew you were going to war; they knew you weren't like all these long-haired bastards; they knew that you were one of the gutsy ones, you'd lay down your life for themâand, by Jesus, for your country tooâyeah, your country was important, they knew that.
Strain your ears a bit more, are they talking about usâthey looked at usâshit, they might be here to see us off. Isn't that bloody nice of them, you know they're the type of Australian we're fighting for. Good on 'em. Notice a posterâWELCOME HOME ROBYN. Remember feeling like you wished that you could have taken Robyn's placeâit wasn't us after allâfeel a little stupid? Fuck 'em, rotten bastards, they could all drop dead right now and you wouldn't lose one ounce of sleepâwouldn't bat an eyelid.
Courage regained, you're still on top. Who the hell was Robyn anywayâyour war was in the papers every day.
Bloody Robyn wasn't more important than you anyway.
THE party tonight, you weren't nineteen until Monday, but it was better to hold it tonight. It's only a day, you shrugged to your mother. Your bird had arrivedâshe was a bit pissed by nine o'clockâeveryone was there, all of them, about eighty people. Shit! Eighty people.
âWell, a bloke
could
get his arse shot off,' ruggedly.
âOh yes, I expect we'll see a bit of action,' nonchalantly.
âDon't worry, they'll get you, too, soon,' knowingly.
Eighty peopleâand the presents.
Shit, it was good of them to give you all those presents wasn't it?
Travelling cases, shaving kit in a leather folder.
Recordsâthat's a bit impractical, but thanks, Jesus, thanks anyway.
Everyone's pissed. Some bird being groped at the top of the stairs.
You'd got yours out in the back yardâremember how you'd got her out there and grabbed her straight between the legs.
Well you had kissed her firstâshit, a man didn't go the grope straight off. You were nineteen.
Remember how wet she wasâthat was good eh, meant she wanted it.
You'd laid her down beside the garage.
âWill someone come?'
âNo.'
âAre you sure?'
âYes. No one will come.'
Pink panties coming off. Remember finding itâthe slippery, wet slit. Going in. She moaned. She's enjoying it.
âAh, fuck me!' Moves faster. She's blown. Squeezes her thighs into you.
âCome out,' she says. Surprise, she's sucking me off.
And I thought I wasn't going to get anything.
You kissed her again, went inside, no one missed you. You'd do it again later; she was staying the night anywayâenjoy yourself.
We're all singing songs. We'll drink a toast to the future. No longer will men suffer. That'll upset the neighbours.
âGET one fer me.' Yeah, you bet, mate.
Stand on the station.
âSee you mate.' Remember the handshakes, the twinge when you pulled out of the station. You hung out of the windowâwavedâyes, keep waving. Hang on. This is it.
A curve in the line. They're gone; for twelve months they're gone. Find some comrades. What, a suitcase full of large cans? Shit, yeah, forget all that family shit; you're a pro, pro's don't have families. You are a member of the Elite Regiment of the Australian Armyâyou're a pro.
âGot an opener?'
REMEMBER Saigon, Jesus, Tan Son Nhut. You'd never realised just how much equipment the Yanks had.
Squat down next to the coke machine, notice the holes in the metal work, mortar shrapnel. Things go better with cokeâeven mortars. Packs arranged in neat lines of threes, ham steaks courtesy of Qantas for lunch.
âChrist, look at that,' says Harry.
âWhere?' I'm nearly asleep. Shit, I'm thirsty.
âThe Hercules.' My eyes travel onto a four-engined cargo plane. A group of Americans in fatigues are loading large plastic bags from trolleys.
âChrist, they're corpses. There must be sixty-odd in that lot.'
âAre they what I think they are?' I ask.
âYep.'
âJesus.'
âPlenty more where they came from.'
âFuck,' is all I can say.
âTO Nui Dat by truck is approximately thirty minutes' ride. The highway you will be travelling on has been under Viet Cong control for the last twelve years. I want one man in each truck to act as shotgun. If we have a contact we will go into a standard vehicle ambush drill. Shotguns, keep your eyes open and don't kill any fucking villagers. On the way,' words of wisdom from the squadron sergeant major.
âAny questions?'
âSir, how do we know the difference between villagers and Charlies?'
âWhen they blow yer stupid head off, does that answer your question?'
âYessir.'
We all laughedâthe sergeant major laughed too.
I am almost disappointed that no one shoots at us. Shit it feels good, the local nogs are as scared as all Christ of us.
âD'ja see the looks on their faces?'
âReally make you feel welcome, don't they.'
Remember as soon as you got thereârain. Remember how you said that you'd never seen rain like it but you got used to it after a couple of days and anyway it was good to wash in; the small waterfalls it made when it spilled down from the roof of the supply tent, much better than that chlorinated cats' piss that the sappers used to get from the well.
There were times when it was good to lie in your own little sandbagged and plastic covered world. In the afternoons, when it rainedâit always rained on time.
âYou could set your watch by this fucking rain,' said Harryâevery day, day after day. It became a ritual after a while, remember, as soon as it would start to rain the whole troop of sixteen men would scream in unison: âWhat could you set your watch by, Harry?' and Harry would scream back, âThis fucking rain.'
AND yes, there were the card games. The OC had strictly forbidden gambling in the lines, everyone from 2 IC down gambled. Pontoon, of course, and always in the supply tent where Black Ronnie, the quartermaster, ran the games, every night.
âPay twenty.'
âWouldn't that fuck ya; eighteen.'
âThat's the third in a row.'
âYou wouldn't be cheatin' your comrades in arms would you, Ronnie?'
âWho? Me? No way.'
âMy arse.'
âBuy oneâand another.'
âBust me for four bucks.'
âWhat are you on?'
âSixteen.'
âSixteen and ten is twenty six.'
âThanks, cunt.'
âYou are most welcome, my boy.'
âBets thanks, fellas.'
Every night it went on except when you were out on operations.
âAre you playing or not?'
âBuy one.'
âShuddup. Listen.'
âWhat?'
âShuddup.'
Crump, crump, crump, crumpâ¦footsteps of death. Jesus Christ, Incoming Mortars Incoming. The clash beside the tent made you stop dead. Christ, the stink. Crump, crump, crump. Cordite. Oh shit, remember how Black Ronnie crashed forward over the table and how you froze when you saw the hole in the back of his head and how he started to vomit. Shit, oh Jesus noâand when you went to grab him, the gush of blood from his mouth that hit you full in the faceâblood and vomit. âOh fuck,' you said. âRonnie,' you yelled, âOh Jesus.' Crump, crumpâremember how you could see the grey-blue brain pulse out its last few, jerky movements, and Ronnie's eyes. One more cough, more blood. Remember how you swore that he wouldn't die and you knew damn well that you were holding a corpse and that you were standing like a fool holding him across the table under the arms while he spewed blood over the cards. Remember how you thought that the cards would get messed up.
âBets thanks, fellas.'
Remember how the daze passed by and you pulled him onto the table, moved yourself back into life; the world was coming back now, the mess was on fireâand how you started to hear voices again.
The medic running along the road outside, his aid kit flying behind him.
âEveryone OK over here?'
âMedic!'
âOn my way.'
âJesus, you hit?'
âNo, Ronnie's dead.'
âYou OK? You sure?'
âYeah.'
âMedic, for Christ's sake!'
âI've only got one pair of fucking legs, mate.'
âWho's that?'
âRoberts.'
âWhat's wrong?'
âLost his gut. Walked straight out of the tent. Went off about two feet from him.'
âRoll him over, keep his legs down.'
Remember how he screamed.
âOh shit, what a mess. I don't think he'll make it,' said the medic.
âSignallers have got two dead, one wounded,' someone yelled.
âWhat a night. Got a smoke?'
âThanks, mate.'
The medic runs to the signal lines, past the burning mess.
âHow many?'
âTwo dead, one wounded.'
The signals corporal grabs the medic by the shirt.
âYou sure they're dead?'
âHow fucking sure would you like me to be?'
âLet him go, you stupid shit.'
âSorry, mate.'
âYeah, it's OK. Forget it.'
âOne got it full in the face, and the other lost his chest.'
âHow about the other one?'
âOver here.'
âWhere's the torch?'
âAhhh, oh shit, it hurts.'
Remember how you stood beside the medic and watched another professional whimper and you started to have doubts.
âHe's OK. His thigh's ripped open.'
âWill they cut my leg off corporal?'
âNot unless they're pissed they won't, mate.'
Morphine, clamps, saline, shell dressings.
âMove him carefully, we got a live one here.'
âDo we own a piece of board or plank or something?' âHow about a rifle?'
âGreat.'
The four of us watch as the medic slides the rifle under the leg.
âStick your hand underneath and see if the muzzle is near his arse yet.'
âYeah.'
âOK. Now lift his arse, roll it over a bit. Yeah, that's it and slide the rifle up to his hip.'
âIt's there.'
âShit hot. Right, now hang on and try not to jolt him. One, two, three lift. OK, now gently forward to the RAP.'
Remember how it was outside the hospital that night. Some battalions had been hit a lot harder than we had. Seven land rovers full of casualties. Some were minor, some wouldn't see morning and some, like the one with both eyes gone, would still be around in the morning but wouldn't see anything.
âI'd rather be dead.' It was Harry.
âYeah, what a shit trick,' I replied grimly.
Good on you Harry. Remember him sitting beside you in the mud.
âWere you with Ronnie?'
âUh-huh.'
âYou look as though you've been used as a tampon.'
I started to laugh.
âC'mon we'll get those clothes off you and I'll buy you a beer.'
âBuy me ten eh?'
âYou're on.'
REMEMBER the mess line the morning after. Remember how Harry and I were three parts drunk.
The Officers' and Sergeants' Mess had a huge hole in the roof, the result of a direct hit last night.
âRight place, wrong time,' came from some wit farther up the mess line.
âWhat's this shit?' says Harry.
âPowdered egg.'
âYou've really excelled yourself this morning, cookie.'
âYou know why they call cooks fitters and turners, cookie?'
âNo, why?'
âBecause you fit food into pots and turn it into shit.'
A bumble of mirthful snickering and faces break into smiles.
âUp your arse,' comes the stern reply.
âBe nice, cookie, or I'll piss in your powdered egg.'
Exit Harry. Be sure to tune in again tomorrow for another episode in the continuing saga of Harry and the Baitlayer.