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Authors: Bing West

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BOOK: The Village
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There was Suong, squatting on his haunches, his elbows braced against the inside of his thighs, his two hands wrapped around the butt of a 45-caliber pistol. Suong shot the sapper between the eyes. Nobody else tried to come through the wire that night.

I visited Binh Nghia several times in the summer and fall of 1968, usually accompanied by Charles Benoit, a Yale graduate who had spent four years in Vietnam and had extraordinary fluency in the language and a deep compassion for the people. Suong would not believe that Benoit, speaking Vietnamese as well as he did, did not work for the U.S. government and so he made a strong effort to convince us that things were going badly and that he needed the Marines. Speaking to Benoit in Vietnamese he said:

“The Viet Cong have come back. They go to My Hué every night. We're not afraid of them, but if we get into a firefight in My Hué 1, we're not going to get any help from district or from the U.S. Army for several hours. My men and I know this for a fact. We got into a fight out on the sand dunes last month and it was two hours before we had illumination. We captured an M-79 grenade launcher anyways. If we have to fight alone, I want it the way it was last year. With the Marines we had enough firepower to fight anybody, and we could always get helicopter medevacs.”

“Why not recruit your own People's Self-Defense Force,” Benoit asked, “like they are doing in the hamlets near Saigon?”

“That is Saigon,” Suong laughed. “How would I pay them? Or arm them? Besides, they'd be a bunch of amateurs and my men would have to spend months training them. We wouldn't be able to rely on them. They'd get lost in the My Hués, and they might run away.

“No, it would be a lot better if Sergeant Mac and the Marines would come back.”

“But the Marines you knew are gone,” I said. “Mac is a civilian in a university in the United States.”

Suong spent several minutes digesting that piece of information. He found it hard to imagine a sergeant in any army being admitted to a university. After a pause, he spoke again.

“Well, Garcia is on Binh Thuy Island and he still visits the village, and there are a few others. Perhaps you could all spend the night with us in Binh Nghia?”

A boat ferried us from Binh Yen Noi to the island, where we met Garcia. He said he had gone back to the United States but after six months of garrison duty he “couldn't hack it any more” and asked to be sent back to the combined unit. He did not like what he had found on Binh Thuy. The replacements for McGowan and the old group had brought with them the antagonistic attitude of line troops toward the villagers. The only Vietnamese whom they liked was Joe, who was still with the unit and doing very well in school. Garcia said he spent a lot of time in Binh Nghia, away from the other Americans.

The only other American from the old group in Binh Thuy was Foster, whose stolen watch had been returned after the intervention of Captain Dang. Like Garcia, he enthusiastically responded to Suong's invitation. But there was something he had to do along the way.

So the four of us set out to walk the short mile back to the ferry crossing to Binh Nghia, Foster in the lead and taking us by a roundabout way, across the green paddies under a hot July sun at a leisurely pace, Benoit stopping often to chat with villagers, we others envying the ease of his tongue and the grace of his manner.

We came out on the river bank just south of Binh Nghia at the tiny hamlet of Chau Tu, and Foster stopped and stood for a minute looking at the quiet, tree-shaded houses in front of him and the people bent over in the paddies and the water buffalo wallowing in the mud at a low spot in the river and the dragonflies droning in the summer afternoon.

“This is my hamlet,” he said. “I'm the only American who comes here. Watch this.”

From a pocket in his utilities he drew out a snowball wad of plastic explosive with a short piece of fuse.

“The people here are really poor,” he said. “They have to go the farthest, so they get the worst fishing spots out at sea. I try to help out by bringing fresh fish.”

With that he ignited the fuse and dropped it in the water. The explosion brought black mud bubbling to the surface and boys streaming out of nowhere shouting “Gene! Gene!” even before they could see him. To the bank they raced, shed their clothes and plunged laughing in. Soon their dives recovered several small fish, but many boys were still empty-handed. So the corporal walked the bank with a dozen naked urchins traipsing behind. He would peer into the water and locate schools of minnows, raise his M-16, and fire into their midst. The concussion would shock them, and the boys would jump in and scoop them out.

In the midst of this laughing, giggling procession, we entered the hamlet. The shooting and the shouting had brought the people to their doorways and, when they saw Foster, they simply waved and went about their business. One small, sturdy lad, his breeches stuffed with minnows, was allowed to carry Foster's M-16, now unloaded, and he walked at the head of our small procession, turning constantly to joke with Foster, finally running pell-mell up the trail and disappearing into a small grove of banana trees. Foster did not seem concerned about his rifle and we ambled up the trail, turning in where the boy had gone.

In front of us stood a small, thatched house with Foster's rifle propped against one of the outside walls. The boy had his back to us, tugging at his young, attractive mother, who stood in the open doorway, looking pleased and flustered and trying to shoo her son away while smiling. The smile was all for Foster, who grinned back, said a few words and settled comfortably into a chair beneath a palm tree, gesturing to us to sit down on a bench nearby. The young woman had gone inside and was bustling about preparing hot tea and snacks. While we waited, Foster talked.

“Everybody has sort of his favorite place and favorite family. This is mine. Nguyen Co was in the combined unit with me. He was a good man with a BAR, and one morning after a long night he took me back here to meet his wife and boy and have breakfast. Co and I were tight. It got so I spent as much time here as I did at the fort. He got killed in a firefight near My Hué about four, five months ago. A grenade got him.

“That was pretty tough on the family. I mean, there's no one to look out for them. The government didn't give them too much, so I sort of drop around and help out. Little Nguyen's a real good kid. We have a lot of fun together. He's the best swimmer in the hamlet. You saw him diving for those minnows. He and Joe are best buddies, so he stays at the fort with me a lot.”

The mother came out of the house with a tray of food and drinks. When we had each taken our cup, Foster put the empty tray on his knees and from six different pockets drew C-ration cans of fruit and meat, along with several packets of cocoa and sugar. He piled them all on the tray and handed it with a wink to the boy, who winked back and walked into the house.

“It's not what you might think,” he said. “I'm not shacking up here. I don't think I could if I wanted to, which I don't. Besides, if I did, I might spoil her chances of remarrying. And the Cong around here are mean bastards. I don't want to give them an excuse to fuss with this family. So I never go inside that house. Whenever I visit, I sit right out here. If I'm going to eat, I eat off a tray, right here.”

We finished our drinks, thanked the woman and walked the short distance to Binh Yen Noi. There the villagers fed us well, and there were several bottles of beer drunk while old anecdotes were retold for the fifth or tenth time and Benoit almost succeeded in convincing me to swallow a red pepper whole. In the growing dusk we left the hamlet and trudged up PF Hill, looking forward to a full night's sleep.

But Suong was on the radio.

“Do you know what he said?” Benoit asked. “He just told the district chief that he has a strong American squad at his position and he would like to send an ambush to My Hué. Now if we don't go, he'll lose face, almost like he was lying to the district chief. I think he's determined to show us that things aren't going well.”

“Don't worry,” Foster said. “We'll protect you.”

With four PFs and two Marines, we walked off the hill at eleven that evening. Luong was in charge of the patrol and he took point, stopping at every trail intersection to run his hand through the dust for possible trip wires. As we cut across dunes, he cast for tracks in the sand. When we waded swollen paddies, he went first and left ripples without splashes. We set in at a river crossing point in My Hué, and, sure enough, the enemy were signaling with lights from the far shore.

Luong grinned and the PFs and the Marines lay down in a row and waited for a boat to cross. And waited and waited. The light kept flashing on and off, on and off, while somewhere near us a contact man with a lantern must have sat inside his house and, having seen or heard us, was not about to commit suicide by striking a light. Luong thought they might try to cross regardless, but they didn't. We waited until dawn, when the fishermen and their sons stumbled sleepy-eyed to their boats and, upon seeing us sitting in the foliage, set off with haste down-river. It was obvious the PFs weren't visiting as frequently as they had the previous year.

Garcia had snuggled in the shadows of a doorway, and when the hamlet started to stir, a fisherman opened the door and Garcia lurched sideways. Thinking Garcia was some drunk who had not made it home after a bad night, the fisherman gave him a hearty kick. Surprised and shaken to find himself sprawled in the dust, Garcia sprang up, giving his wide-eyed and dumbfounded antagonist a shove which sent him reeling back into his house. That set off the fisherman's wife, who was not about to be intimidated by some grubby American, and Garcia found himself evicted from the premises in a torrent of verbal abuse, despite his best efforts to strike back with single-syllable swearwords. That confrontation ended any hope for the ambush and we left, Luong being soundly pummeled on the way back by a pretty young miss when he kidded her about a possible pregnancy.

At the edge of the Binh Yen Noi hamlets we met Suong, who was taking his platoon into the My Hués in the hope that some Viet Cong had entered after we left. He asked if we were satisfied that the enemy were trying to come back into the village. We said yes, but we thought he could handle it. Suong growled and said he could handle it a whole lot better with even a few Marines, meaning he would like to have Garcia and Foster if there were no chance McGowan would return with a full squad—an allusion to the echelons of support he knew were guaranteed by theU.S. military if even one American was in danger. After a half hour of discussion, Suong finally and reluctantly accepted the notion that we were civilians and could not order Marines back to Binh Nghia. We said good-bye, promising to visit again.

 

On our return to the area in October, we learned that Foster had become a hero and a legend. The people told us first—the boatman who was taking us from district upriver to Binh Thuy and Binh Nghia, and his other passenger, an old grandmother who wanted her picture taken. Later the PFs and village officials filled in the story.

It seemed that during September enemy activity on Binh Thuy Island had picked up considerably. At night small bands would circle near the fort and fire their newly acquired AK-47 Russian automatic rifles to scare the defenders and impress the villagers. A Viet Cong with a megaphone, nicknamed “Rudy Vallee,” came three times a week to exhort the PFs to desert and to curse the Marines in pidgin English. Unable to ambush Rudy, the Marines acquired a German shepherd and Rudy had not returned since. The PFs were bringing in reports of VC movements in every hamlet.

Then on a routine patrol one evening, Foster, who was walking point, had the uneasy feeling that he was being stalked. He was on a well-traveled trail hemmed by houses, and each time he paused to listen he had the prickly sensation that another person was pausing opposite him in one of the backyards. Worse still, Foster was convinced he was outclassed. The man was moving through backyards and over fences at Foster's pace and with less noise.

Foster wanted to give it up, to quit before he found out just how good the man was, to turn around and go back. But behind him there were two Americans and two PFs, and he didn't know how to tell them he was afraid without being laughed at. He was uncertain. He didn't want to go on.

So he stopped, gesturing to those behind him to keep their distance. With his safety off, his finger on the trigger, his body in a slight crouch, he stood ready to fire at the slightest sound or movement. He stood and refused to budge, and the man came looking to kill him and brushed ever so slightly against the side of a house and Foster tore loose a full magazine of tracers.

The man screamed as a searing bullet cut into him, while Foster in his fear slammed another magazine into his rifle, sending twenty more bullets spitting forth in search of the sound. Then the other patrollers joined in and the man was driven into the ground.

The man was alone. Foster picked up an AK-47 which lay beside the body and turned to leave. But the highly excited PFs would not hear of it. They insisted on carrying the body back to the marketplace at Binh Thuy. All the next day, villagers came from both Binh Thuy and Binh Nghia to stare at the dead man in disbelief. Mr. Minh, the hamlet chief, presented Foster with a case of cold beer. The people smiled and bowed when he walked by; the children swarmed after him; and the son of his dead PF friend from Chau Tu came to the fort to share in the glory of his American foster father.

BOOK: The Village
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