SNAFU: Survival of the Fittest

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SNAFU: Survival of the Fittest Page 12

by Jeremy Robinson


  It says a lot about a man who finds more meaning to life during war, than back home in downtown New Orleans. For a Southern black man, army life can be a whole lot easier than tending bar in the Blues quarter for minimum pay plus tips. Back home Fisher was nothing. A shadow; a noise; a memory. But here he was something; here he was Troop Sergeant of an armoured reconnaissance squadron, the thinking man’s armour, the spearhead of the main battle tanks and self-propelled artillery units of the 1st Cavalry Regiment. Travel by night and spy by day. Panther Troop. First in, last out. Yeah, life here was easy once you learnt to respect the one fundamental rule.

  We own the day, but Charlie owns the night.

  Fisher stood in the open turret of his M113 armoured personnel carrier, his arms resting casually on the hatch rim. The APC’s metal felt cool on his exposed arms; he preferred the enclosed T-50 turret to the open A-cav. 50 cal. Mount – too open to Charlie’s AKs. The five-vehicle troop stood line-ahead along the deep rutted road beneath the jungle canopy, their engines idling as a calming white-noise filled Fisher’s head-set. Although the jungle limited horizons, Fisher could feel the storm building somewhere ahead of them, rolling closer on footfalls of thunder through the mountains. He closed his eyes and faced its approach, his skin bristling with electricity as the sky gradually darkened. Fisher reluctantly opened his eyes again, ever aware of the suffocating jungle surrounding them, praying it would be kind to them on this bullshit mission just a day before Christmas.

  “Special ops my ass,” he whispered, spitting over the side as he awaited orders on the troop’s next bound. He spat again, aware the taste in his mouth would never go away. It was the taste of this country, this war.

  Fisher swung the turret around to see what was happening at the Lieutenant’s vehicle. The LT sat on the rim of his own turret hatch, going over a map with that CIA spook, Green. What sort of bullshit name is Sherwood Green anyway? Fisher wiped beads of perspiration from his face with the already saturated towel around his neck.

  It seemed the only swinging dick in the unit who knew where they were going and why was Green himself, drip-feeding information in short bounds. All Fisher knew for sure was that they were bombed-up to the max with ammunition, which meant there was every chance of trouble ahead. In fact Panther Troop was the vanguard for a full regiment of main battle tanks shadowing them just five miles to the rear. That much muscle this far north could only mean a world of hurt for someone. Even though mission specs were minimal, Fisher nevertheless knew how to read a map, realising being this close to the Demilitarised Zone meant breaching a dozen different conventions before so much as even firing a shot.

  Fisher noticed Green fold up his map and jump down from the vehicle. He also noticed the pained look on the LT’s face.

  Keying the internal comms, Fisher said simply, “Heads-up boys, the spook’s heading this way. Looks like we’ve got our orders.”

  “Hope he ain’t planning to ride with us,” said Pete Jenkins from the driver’s compartment up front. “I’m not in the mood for some office jockey on board.”

  “Keep it to yourself, Trooper Jenkins,” replied Fisher. “I don’t care whether you respect the man, but I’ll kick your ass all the way to Hanoi Jane’s hut if you don’t respect his rank.”

  “Sorry, Sergeant,” Jenkins offered. “It’s just that it’s Christmas Eve, man. Who the fuck pulls a mission on Christmas Eve?”

  “Put a sock in it, Jenkins,” cut in Corporal Nathan Fry from the crew compartment below. Fry was effectively the vehicle’s 2-I-C, managing the radios and Troop logistics. “I’m sure Santa will find us way out here.”

  Agent Green climbed up the front of Fisher’s vehicle and crouched beside the turret. “I’m riding with you, Sergeant.”

  “It’s an honour to have you aboard, sir.”

  “This is the last bound before our objective,” he said placing his map in front of Fisher and pointing to a ridgeline eight miles ahead. “Your vehicle will lead the troop in a line-ahead formation until we hit this stream.” He tapped the junction on the map with his finger. “We then follow the creek upstream through the low country until this clearing just short of the ridge where we can spread out into an arrowhead formation. You got it?”

  Fisher took up his own map and drew a line along the route in pencil. “Got it,” he confirmed.

  “This last bound is under strict radio silence. If anyone so much as keys a handset on our frequency, I’ll have them severely punished.”

  “I understand, sir,” said Fisher, wondering what possible punishment would be worse than spending Christmas Eve in deep-J this far up Charlie’s ass. He yelled down at Fry in the belly of the vehicle. “Corporal, open the cargo hatch and let our guest on board.”

  As the hatch swung open by Green’s feet, Fisher offered his thoughts. “Sir, I believe this storm is gonna hit hard. We may need the radios to keep the troop together.”

  Green leered. “What part of radio fucking silence don’t you understand, Sergeant?” He circled his arm in the air to indicate they were moving out, and each vehicle responded with a rev of their engines. “If the troop breaks up for any reason, we rendezvous at the objective’s grid reference at 2200.”

  “Got it,” replied Fisher, slipping his headsets back over his ears and keying the intercom as Green jumped down beside Fry in the cargo bay. “Let’s roll, Jenkins,” he said. “Follow this track in a line-ahead formation. We have the honour of riding point, followed by 1-2, 1-2-Bravo and 1-2-Charlie.”

  The vehicle lurched forward, tracks protesting until finding traction in the soft earth. The troop pushed forward, ever aware of the dying light; ever aware of the approaching storm. Charlie owns the night, Fisher reminded himself, glancing over his shoulder from time to time to check the LT’s position in the convoy. He also checked on Green below. Constantly studying the map and his watch, Green finally keyed his intercom as the first few drops of rain hit the vehicle’s armour.

  “As soon as the daylight’s gone, Fisher, we go to infrared. No white light.”

  “I figure that’s about the same time this storm’s gonna hit, sir. Unfortunately the IR doesn’t cut through rain.”

  Green sighed. “It is what it is, Sergeant. IR or no IR, you get this troop to the objective by 2200 tonight.”

  “Will do, sir. But for the record, don’t you think it’s about time the crew knew what we’re doing this far north? I mean, we’re carrying enough ammo to take down a small city, so it’s more than just a taxi service. We’re just an hour or so from the RV and we still don’t have any final orders.”

  Green sighed again, and Fisher thought he was in for a mouthful of abuse. But he was wrong.

  “Okay,” Green said with a little reluctance. “Your LT’s got the full mission orders now, and the Delta Team travelling with Tail End Charlie has been briefed since the mission’s launch point. We’re bombed up because frankly we don’t know what to expect, so we’ve prepared for anything.”

  “That’s encouraging.”

  “Yeah, well, our intelligence advises that a regiment of North Vietnam Regulars are also pushing towards our objective from Hanoi.”

  “That explains why it’s so time-critical,” said Fisher. “But what exactly are we in this race for? What’s the prize?”

  “Okay, Fisher, I don’t care how open-minded you are, so just take what I’m about to say as gospel; as the culmination of five years intelligence and well-founded ground work. Men have died getting this information to the Pentagon, and if the information is true, then we may all be about to enter the history books.”

  Fisher looked the CIA man in the eyes, realising suddenly just how high on Washington’s agenda this mission was. He nodded his agreement just as the cool air ahead of the storm-front squeezed through the jungle in a bluster.

  “There’s an eight-hundred-year-old temple just inside the southern boundary of the demilitarised zone. And if intelligence is correct, this temple houses something that could not only change
the course of this war, but ensure victory of any future war the United States may find itself in.” Green took a moment, realising the light rain on his face was gradually getting heavier. “This temple is the source of a subterranean spring that is said to only run for the course of twenty-four hours once a year.”

  “Don’t tell me,” said Fisher, squinting against the driving rain. “Christmas day, right.”

  “Yeah,” said Green. “Christmas day.”

  “So what has an eight-hundred-year-old Buddhist temple got to do with Christ’s birthday?”

  “The temple isn’t Buddhist,” Green said. “It’s Roman Catholic.”

  “Catholic?”

  “Yeah. We believe it’s one of the furthest outposts of the 4th Crusade, where newly discovered Vatican documents suggest the Crusaders discovered a spring that only flows on the anniversary of Christ’s birth. So now you see the absolute urgency behind this mission. It’s said this spring will bestow immortality and unearthly strength to whoever drinks the water, and was said to have been used to make a super army that devastated all before it in this region. The site was promptly made sacred and secret, the Holy Roman Empire building a fortress-like temple around it in 1204.”

  “Don’t tell me we’re here to take on an army of eight-hundred-year-old Crusaders?’

  Green obviously didn’t appreciate Fisher’s cynicism. “They call them the Guardians,” he answered stony faced. “And like I said, we don’t know what to expect, so we’ve prepared for the worst.”

  Fisher simply nodded his understanding then keyed off the intercom, muttering to himself, “Great. We’re about to fight Charlie and the Vatican for the fountain of fucking youth.”

  * * *

  “Darkness cannot drive out darkness”

  Martin Luther King, Jr.

  PART TWO

  It sounded like a charging bull through the foliage. Even over the engine’s reverberation and the constant hiss of the headsets, Fisher could hear the force of the rain-front rolling in, clawing at the jungle’s face like a thrashing beast, roaring until it hit in a torrent.

  Fisher lowered his seat as he keyed the intercom. “Close down, driver. You too, Fry.” Fisher reached up and closed his own turret hatch, water dripping from the seals until he fastened the combat lock. “How’s your visibility up front, Jenkins?”

  “Near enough to zero, Sarge.”

  “Push-on, Sergeant!” Green’s voice was distinctive over the intercom.

  “What can you see?” Fisher asked his driver.

  “Fuck-all, Sarge. I’ve got a white-out in front… The same over my right shoulder… And a whole lot of jungle slapping at my left periscope.”

  “Maintain that position,” Fisher said, “and keep the speed steady. I’ve got slightly better visibility from up here, but it’s marginal. If you keep the foliage against our left hull it stands to reason we should still be on the road.” Fisher squinted against the forward turret window, constantly wiping condensation from the inside glass. “At this speed the jungle should make way for a clearing in about an hour or so. There we’ll steer left until we find that creek line.”

  “Roger that, Sarge.”

  “With a little luck this storm will pass over in no time.”

  But it didn’t. The hour passed as darkness took hold, the only images outside captured as silhouettes against each lightning strike. That’s when the imagination turned on a man. That’s when you saw Charlie crouching in every shadow. We own the day… That’s when the promise of daylight was the only thing that made the night remotely bearable. They own the night. The hour quickly turned to two, then three, as they eventually stumbled across the now swollen creek and headed due north towards the cathedral site.

  “Mr. Green?” Fisher said over the intercom. “Sir, I lost visual of the troop two hours ago, and strongly suggest we break radio silence momentarily to re-group.”

  “No,” came Green’s stern reply. “I can’t risk the NVA intercepting our radio chatter, so we push on.”

  “But, sir, the troop could be scattered all over this fucking grid. I believe we’d be stronger arriving in force and with some semblance of organisation.”

  “Everyone knows their orders, Sergeant. If separated, meet at the RV at 2200. That’s just ten min—”

  The vehicle collided with something outside, throwing Fisher against the .50 calibre machine gun’s breach and cutting his cheek. The engine revved in a violent burst as Jenkins’s weight fell against the accelerator with the impact before stalling. The interior lights flickered before going out as the headsets dwindled to total silence. There was only the sound of the torrential rain on the hull until Fisher eventually broke the silence.

  “Everyone okay?” he called, wiping the blood from his cheek.

  “Yeah,” came Jenkins’s laboured voice.

  “A little shook up,” called Fry, “but I’ll live.”

  “You okay back there, Mr Green?”

  “What the fuck happened, Fisher? Where’s the fucking lights?”

  “I’d say we’ve knocked a battery terminal off on impact, sir. Should be an easy fix.”

  “Hey, Sarge?” Jenkins broke in. “You might want to see this.”

  Fisher straightened. “What is it?”

  “I can’t make out what we hit, but I think I see something moving out there. You might be better placed to see from the turret.”

  Fisher braced himself against the .50’s breach, straining to see through the sheets of rain outside. A lightning flash briefly revealed an open landscape scattered with familiar shapes, but the multiple silhouettes also triggered a sense of denial. “What the fuck?” he muttered under his breath. Just then, something slapped against the turret’s forward window and Fisher instinctively pushed himself away from the glass with a startled gasp. He wrenched the cocking handle back on the .50 calibre and unlocked the turret rim, his thumbs held firmly against the rear trigger as he manually traversed the turret full-circle to scan the terrain outside.

  Finally, with the gun facing forward again, Fisher paused, each heartbeat resonating in his ears. Unblinking, he waited for that next flash of lightning to illuminate the land outside. Breath held trembling in his lungs, he paused to confirm the image he thought he saw earlier. Fresh forks of lightning streaked across the sky to strike the ground beyond the surrounding tree line, briefly illuminating the scattered APCs in the clearing around them, their turrets pointing in all directions, gun barrels spent and motionless. As brief as the lightshow was, there was no mistaking the remaining troop vehicles outside – immobile, strewn in every direction, and not a sign of life.

  “Green,” he called below. “We’ve got a problem.”

  “What is it?”

  “Looks like the rest of the troop made the rendezvous point ahead of us, sir.”

  “How’s that a problem?”

  “I don’t know that they’re in any shape to go on from here.”

  “What the—”

  Then the rain stopped.

  It didn’t peter out gradually, but rather ceased in a heartbeat, the sudden silence becoming quickly unnerving until the sound of footsteps on the hull outside caught Fisher’s attention.

  “Fuck,” he spat at a whisper, staring up at the inch and a half of metal over his head.

  “There’s someone out there,” said Green, crouching at the base of the turret space.

  “Maybe it’s one of our boys,” said Jenkins from the driver’s seat.

  “No one opens a hatch until we can confirm who’s who, okay?” Fisher was adamant. He considered their situation for a moment before continuing, “Jenkins, we need power back ASAP. You can access the engine’s battery from the panel over your right shoulder. Reach in and check the terminals. If they’ve come away from the battery then hook us up again. If not, check the fuses.”

  “I’m on it, Sarge.”

  The footsteps, heavy and purposeful, continued above them.

  “Fry,” he said at a whisper. “N
ow that the rain’s stopped I need you to set up the infrared imaging so I can see what we’re dealing with out there before we decide on our next move.”

  “I’m afraid our next move is set in stone, Sergeant Fisher,” said Green in a firm, don’t-fuck-with-me voice. “Our next move is to secure that cathedral ahead of the NVA.”

  “Not until we know what we’re dealing with, Mr Green! Not until I know who or what the fuck that is creeping around on my vehicle! Not until I know how many of our men are alive out there! We’re a long way from home, Mr Green, and fountain of fucking youth or no fountain of fucking youth, me and my boys are your only way in or out of this shit fight right now, you got it?”

  With a brief flash of sparks from the driver’s compartment and an instinctive, “Shiiit!” from Jenkins, the lights came back up with a flicker. “We’ve got power back, Sarge.”

  Fisher took a deep breath, staring Green down in the process. “Let’s just see what we’re up against, shall we, Mr Green.”

  Whatever was moving around on the hull had paused a moment before trying the combat latch on Fisher’s turret hatch. Locked from within, it held fast, but somehow even the inch and a half of metal didn’t seem like enough armour between Fisher and whatever lurked outside. He switched from white-light to red and peered out through the narrow port window where something was moving around just left of the gun.

  “Everyone at their stations,” he ordered. “I’m gonna fire a few warning rounds. Jenkins, switch to infrared just as soon as I cease fire so I can see what’s going on out there.” He grasped the dual handles of the gun and placed both thumbs firmly on the trigger ready to fire. “Here we go,” he breathed, folding down the infrared screen in front of the forward window before firing.

 

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