Taz and Kodak
War and Peace
By:
Rick Beck
(© 2019 by the author)
Editor:
Jerry
The author retains all rights. No reproductions are allowed without the author's
consent. Comments are appreciated at...
beck@tickiestories.us
Chapter 16
Unified
Taz was still confounded by his fame. Men
like Gen. Morse made him want to return to Vietnam and forget the entire deal.
Men like those he met at the hospital made him want to be a better man.
He was taken to Kodak's hotel and Kodak came down to escort him to his room. The
hotel would be happy to put him in a room near Kodak, but Kodak said that
wouldn't be necessary.
The general's driver brought Taz's bag up to the room, shook his hand, and
wished him luck. The concierge backed from the room as soon as Taz and Kodak
agreed he wasn't needed.
"Where the hell have you been?" Kodak asked, throwing his arms around Taz and
hugging him close.
"You don't want to know," Taz said "I met the biggest dickhead general I've ever
known."
"You've known a lot?" Kodak asked.
"Enough to know I don't want to meet anymore. I need a shower. My ass is
dragging. I hardly slept on the plane. I can't believe they didn't let me clean
up."
"That's your man's army. I've been stuck with newspapermen all day. Speaking of
dickheads. They can't wait to meet you."
"Yeah, well, if I don't get a shower, they won't see me. I'm beat," Taz said,
yanking off his shoes and sitting on the second big bed in the room. "Nice
quarters."
"Yeah, there's a fruit basket over there. There's a dinner at nine. I'm sure
you're expected. They told me they'd be making arrangements to get you here as
soon as they could get the army to give you up."
"They ran me off," Taz said. "I didn't make any friends at the officers' club. I
don't think they understood me."
"What did you do?" Kodak asked.
"Nothing. It's what they had me doing and then wanted me to stop doing, but I
finished what I started, and I'm not sure they approved of that tactic."
"I'm afraid to ask," Kodak said.
"They took me to the hospital. The wounded from Nam who haven't made it home
yet. They were after photos of me meeting the wounded. They thought they'd make
it a quick stop. I stayed and shook every soldier's hand in the place, doctors
and nurses too.
"I talked to the ones who wanted to talk. Some were massively messed up. These
men wanted me to pay attention to them. No one has ever wanted me to pay
attention to them," Taz revealed. "I stayed as long as they wanted to talk to
me."
"I wouldn't say that. I happen to know personally someone that wants you to pay
attention to him," Kodak smiled.
"They looked at me with these admiring looks. These were guys in serious despair
before I arrived, and by the time I left, most of them were smiling and happy.
They handed out those damn magazines. I don't know where they could get so many
Time magazines. The army must print them. I must have signed a hundred."
"We've got most of the day tomorrow we can talk. You need to jump in the bath
and catch a shave. I like this look personally, but there's a dinner we need to
attend in about an hour and a half. You need to freshen up, handsome."
"What's a bath? I haven't had a bath since I was ten," Taz said, "I'm kind of a
shower guy, when I'm this tired."
"No shower, soldier. You'll just need to rough it."
"I can't swim."
"I'll be your lifeguard. I'll get it ready for you. You'll love it. They've got
bubble bath and bath oil beads in there to make your skin soft and they have
little soaps carved to look like tiny roses. I think they're roses. Tell me what
you think."
Kodak examined the detail and showed the soap to Taz for inspection. He didn't
know what to make of soap someone took the time to carve into a flower.
"Just what a man wants to hear after a flight across the Pacific followed by a
hard day's work. 'There ain't no shower?'"
"No shower. Just the bathtub."
"Okay, let me get out of this monkey suit."
Kodak went in to prepare the bath and Taz was still in his socks and green army
boxer shorts when he returned.
"It's a swimming pool," Taz observed. "All it needs is a diving board," He
continued, as he saw the tub almost full of water.
"Yeah, but it's only four feet deep," Kodak said. "I don't think we'll need the
life vests."
"I'd just need the low diving board then," Taz said, stripping down and stepping
into the tub which had been sunk into the bathroom floor. "Come on in, the
water's fine."
Kodak stepped down into the tub, immediately feeling Taz's hand reaching for
his.
The water ran, the bubbles floated lavishly, and they were content to sit
holding hands beneath the suds. The water rose to Taz's square chin. Kodak's
delicate blushing shoulders protruded from the rich lather. Taz blew the bubbles
away from his mouth. They were finally able to relax, knowing the other was
safe.
Their thighs rested together as their fingers intertwined. Each took refuge in
the other's eyes. It was a relief being together again. Both had experienced
fame as a single and didn't like the taste it left in their mouth. They could
keep doing it and do it believably, but only as a duo.
Kodak knew he could cut and run anytime he got tired of the zoo. He also was
keenly aware that Taz could not run with him. He was under orders and, while he
might be able to stretch the boundaries a bit, he'd best not test the patience
of too many officers too many times. A frontal assault was not the only way to
make a soldier's life miserable.
Being together gave each a strength he didn't possess alone. Caring about one
another meant a larger consideration, no matter the situation. So far they'd
been left alone to get the job done as it was prescribed by the US Army.
Taz understood he had value to the enlisted men and draftees. He didn't give a
damn about much but he found he cared about the other soldiers. Even more
importantly, the other soldiers cared about him. They'd shown him more respect
in an afternoon than he'd received in his lifetime. It was a mutual admiration
society.
He avoided more than a casual glance and a fond farewell to his wounded comrades
in 1st squad. He forced himself to do that, regarding it bad luck to dwell on
what happened to a guy after he'd been hit.
Now, it was these soldiers he found himself drawn to. If this new found fame
could do some good, he wanted to do it for them. This was duty he enjoyed.
Kodak was a journalist/photographer. He could walk away and write a book about
his experience with war. No one would think ill of him if he said he was done
and they'd need to send someone else to keep track of Taz's tour. He could do
that but he wouldn't.
He wasn't much concerned about the journalistic aspect of what he was doing. He
could probably show up anywhere and get an interview for a job at a paper or
even on television. His one word name would be recognized.
There was an open market on journalists who had seen the war up close, when the
country was definitely questioning the wisdom involved in getting the country up
to its knees in deep doo-doo in Vietnam. A book was a natural byproduct of his
experience, although he wouldn't write it until Taz was free of his obligation
to the army. This way Kodak could write it the way he saw it without putting Taz
at risk.
They'd endured a sudden harsh separation. Neither of them was prepared to be
pulled apart. They'd both had a strong desire to be together the entire time
they weren't. They had no desire to be pulled apart again.
They weren't certain this could be a reality they controlled, but it was a
reality they would pursue. They'd have to make contingency plans for situations
they couldn't predict. Obviously the army could do anything they wanted with Taz.
As long as he didn't stray too far from the reservation, they'd probably be
allowed to stay together.
*****
Landing in California was
a relief to both of them. Kodak was home, even if Taz wasn't. They were both
relieved to be back in the States, because Hawaii didn't seem much different
from Vietnam. What was ahead couldn't be predicted. It was probably going to be
a lot like their last few stops. People couldn't get enough of the pair and it
was nice in a crazy sort of way.
The military ceremonies were conducted when the plane taxied over to the
terminal, where soldiers and civilians applauded and cheered the deplaning. Even
the air smelled better to Kodak.
Wearing one of his Hawaiian outfits, yellow on green, Kodak waved
enthusiastically, which got the crowd to roar. Taz had removed his uniform and
kept it hung up until just before they landed, when he put it back on. This had
him looking sharp, even if he was thinking of a nice bath with lots of bubbles.
There was an official presentation of the colors at the bottom of the stairs of
the plane. Taz spent a few minutes saluting superior officers, shaking hands,
smiling for the cameras, and making his way to the enlisted men, who broke
formation to surround him. Each had in mind sharing Taz's hand.
There were no remarks and the press had a field day catching both Kodak and Taz
by surprise. Kodak realized he needed to carry his camera to return the favor
and photograph the photographers who were photographing him.
They yelled Kodak's name and he ended up shaking each journalist's hand as they
quizzed him on how it felt to be home. Taz stayed close behind, shaking every
hand Kodak shook. They weren't planning on being separated this time.
"How does it feel, being back in America?" a voice thrusting forth a microphone
yelled in his direction.
This was the signal to smile.
Kodak stopped as the microphone appeared in between two heads of men who secured
a place in front.
"I don't know. It's great. Being here is great. I didn't think much about it
until I was here. It's been hectic. It's nothing like Vietnam."
No, it wasn't. Even though Kodak was only an observer, he'd seen enough to feel
like he had been at war.
When he'd left the States to find out what war was, he thought he'd come back
with an answer. He couldn't put war into words. It was about men, people,
ideology, and strategy, but how war began or how you stopped it was as big a
mystery to Kodak as it was before he left.
There were army bases, marine bases, air force bases, and naval facilities all
over California. For the first time Taz was not under the control of the army.
He was freely flowing around the state, spending a few days in or near each
facility. He'd be the guest of whatever city was closest, and he appeared at the
pleasure of the civilian city fathers.
There were civilians who greeted the plane and, after a formal military service
to greet the returning hero, the military presence was muted.
Taz was to be presented to the American people as a returning Vietnam war hero.
Keeping the army out of the picture was a strategic decision. The American
people were disillusioned and Taz was someone who could give a more acceptable
look to the war.
It was at the airport that the second cover of Time magazine was shown to Taz &
Kodak. It was a picture of Taz taken after the fire fight, while he reloaded the
B.A.R. His arms were bulging, his eyes piercing and focused, with the caption,
'Have you seen this man?'
He was America's hero.
It was in response to the reports that Taz and Kodak had gone missing in the
Vietnam jungle, after an ambush. There was an article that proclaimed him a
hero, saving his squad, but most likely making the ultimate sacrifice, along
with the heroic photographer who had been left behind as a wounded helicopter
struggled to save the men and crew inside.
"Jesus," Kodak said. "They do think you're John Wayne."
Unlike the first picture, you didn't need to draw any conclusion about the man's
fighting skill the second time around. The story asked the question, "Have you
seen this man?" describing his heroic deed and the fact he was MIA and presumed
KIA, sacrificing his life to save his buddies.
Taz had not only saved his unit, he'd returned from the dead.
Time magazine received thousands of letters inquiring about Taz. There weren't
as many inquiring about the photographer who was missing with him, but many did
ask the question, 'Would the photographer be safe since he is a journalist?' By
the time the, "Have you seen this man?" picture appeared, Taz and Kodak were
back in friendly hands.
It was a story that went around the world as fast as any story ever had. It was
a miracle. It was a coincidence of all coincidences. It was a piece of the
Vietnam saga that the American people could all agree on. There were no protests
and there was no anger over the happy ending, except it was merely beginning for
the pair.
This time Taz and Kodak were driven straightaway to their hotel. They no longer
rated the Presidential or Honeymoon Suite, being given excellent accommodations
in excellent hotels, but in California you never knew when a president or a
honeymooning king might come calling, so you didn't want a couple of nondescript
youngsters occupying the most prestigious rooms.
And they didn't notice any change after living in a tent. As long as they were
alone and together, after closing the door of whatever room they were escorted
to, they were happy. Their first response was to check the lock before engaging
in a fond embrace, a kiss, and frequent hand holding, while reading telegrams
and cards thanking them for their service to the nation.
Bouncing on the bed was routine and the two boys giggled a lot, happy for no
reason at all. The first order of business was to mess up the second bed and
forget it. Anytime the second bed was made up, they'd immediately give it a good
going over, which got them laughing.
They knew they were under the microscope and being safe was better than giving
the journalists more to talk about than their stumble through the jungle. They'd
accepted the fame as necessary and manageable if they wanted to stay together,
but the madness seem to be growing.
They were now a couple. It wasn't only in the mind of the army or the media. All
of the requests for appearances came asking for both Taz and Kodak. They
attended functions together, even at the military bases. They each got
significant applause when introduced to crowds. Both had been heroic even if not
heroes, and who can say what a hero truly is?
The boys took the hand they were dealt and made the most of it. The first class
treatment was great, the food was great, and the long endless flights merged
into long endless train trips that would carry them up and back down the coast
of California.
Kodak loved the scenery. He'd never seen the state from that angle before. Taz
sat next to the window but was more interested in Kodak than the landscape. When
Kodak leaned across him to click off a few pictures of some scene he saw, Taz
might nibble on his ear or simply make sure at least one of Kodak's hands got a
good feel of his arousal.
It was after a visit to military bases in and around the San Diego area, some
time in the second month of touring, that the long train trip to San Francisco
was begun. The last stop before the trek into LA was Oceanside, a sleepy seaside
town adjacent to a large marine presence in Southern California. They'd spent
two days there at the beginning of the week before.
The train was soon in motion again, heading for all points north. The train
moved along the cliffs above the Pacific Ocean. There was time for some great
pictures and soft chat as Taz wore his uniform but Kodak stayed in his Hawaiian
attire, blue on brown. The half full car was quiet, with the ocean view
captivating much of the attention.
It was two marines one seat up and on the opposite side of the car that caused
the trouble. Taz and Kodak were simply being Taz and Kodak. They didn't make
much of a fuss, being happy being together, but appearing to be happy being
together wasn't to everyone's liking.
These were moments the two men cherished. The journalists didn't trail them and
they were free of close scrutiny until they reached the next stop on their tour,
and by that time they were ready for another round of appearances and speaking
engagements. They kept their smiles handy and were adjusting well to their
roles.
Some scrutiny comes unexpectedly and without invitation at times.
"Fucking faggots," a voice interjected just loud enough to be heard across the
isle.
Taz rolled his face across Kodak's shoulder, hearing the epithet and wanting to
see from whence it came. His face didn't display the rage the word was beginning
to boil inside of him.
"Faggots."
The second spitting of the single word condemnation had Taz up, across Kodak,
and he was standing in the isle as the marine came out of his seat, looking for
action. The two men stood chest to chest, staring. It was more chest to chin,
and Taz was left looking up at the self-righteous six foot something marine.
"You mean me, Marine?" Taz ordered with his voice.
"If it fits you I mean you," the marine barked into Taz's face as both of them
blew up like a couple of overweight bullfrogs.
"Taz," Kodak interrupted, grabbing Taz's forearm to break the engagement with
the much bigger man.
"Brand," was the retort of the marine's companion.
"Can't you see I'm working here," Brandon answered, chest pressed hard against
Taz as the two men continued to stare, ready to rock and roll.
"Taz," Kodak said, loosening the grip on his forearm in case they came to blows.
The fourth man started rummaging in the gym bag he had between his legs on the
floor. He seemed to be furiously looking for something and then, he found it.
"Brandon," the second marine stated firmly.
"I told you to leave me alone. I'm busy with this punk," Brandon said.
"You need to look at this," his companion suggested.
"What?" Brandon snapped, looking back over his shoulder to see the cover of the
Time magazine his friend held up for him to look at. "He's him."
"Shit you say. This little squirt? You are him," the marine said surprised, as
he checked Taz's face. "You're Sgt. Tazerski? You're my hero, man. I don't
believe it. How you doing?"
There were handshakes and the marine was suddenly all smiles. The acrimony
melted with the realization of the company the marines were keeping. There was
laughter and a pen for Taz to sign the cover of the magazine.
Brandon bought sandwiches and beer in the dining car and the marines quizzed Taz
on his time in Nam. They were going home to Fresno before shipping out to the
war zone. Taz forgot the insult and felt a kinship, even though they were
marines. He knew what they would face and that was enough for him to forgive the
insult that brought them together. Kodak thought about Khe Sanh.
Warfare was a lot like riding a train. The skirmishes flared up unexpectedly and
died down as quickly. The country was beautiful without enough time to
appreciate it. The travel had become the best time, when friends were made, and
the big battles were won.
The following day Kodak signed the magazine, leaving the marines smiling when
they left the train for Fresno, as the boys went on to San Francisco.
An army staff car, photographers, and an officer waited to greet them before
taking them to their hotel. The Presidio was the only base in the city but
accommodations were in town where they'd have access to all the sights.
It was early in the morning, the streets were damp from an overnight rain, but
the sky was blue and the temperatures about perfect. The air smelled fresh and
the city was still half asleep as they ended up high in the city with a room
that overlooked San Francisco Bay and Alcatraz. It was one more spectacular view
on a tour of spectacular views.
Everyone was happy to see them. There was luncheon at the Presidio, dinner at
the Mark Hopkins, and people at both who were anxious to hear the two speak.
These were buttoned down and formal affairs that forced Kodak back into one of
his finely tailored suits.
The staff car would pick them up and deliver them to each event. There was one
last speaking engagement in two days and they'd depart the city the following
Monday, a week away. It would be on to Portland, Seattle, Spokane, Salt Lake
City, Las Vegas, and Phoenix. They both loved California but looked forward to
seeing more of the country.
San Francisco was alive with activity. After walking to Fisherman's Wharf for a
sandwich, Taz wanted to escape up Powell Street, hoping on and off the cable car
each time they passed a spot that excited him. He bought a short sleeve shirt
and a pair of jeans in a second hand shop, leaving his uniform in the middle of
the hill to be cleaned and pressed. It was the same uniform he always traveled
in and it required a lot of attention. The other tailored uniforms were saved
for appearances and cleaned and pressed at each stop.
Being in jeans, he liked the way they bound him and held his butt. The shirt
outlined a more defined body than he'd had before leaving for Asia. The usual
medium he always wore was snug, firmly outlining his chest and showing off his
arms.
The appearances went smoothly. The routine was less stressful and their
preparation was solid. Even nibbling at the food was perfected to an art, so
they could have something they really wanted once back in the hotel. It seemed a
small price to pay for the kind of freedom they had the majority of time.
The driver of the staff car offered to standby and take them any place they
wanted to go, but they cut the driver loose so they could be on their own. It
was on the day there was nothing to do that Taz sent his jeans and shirt to be
laundered. He put on the fresh uniform from the Powell Street cleaners and felt
at home in it. His pride in the uniform had only grown during the touring.
Being in civvies made him feel... out of uniform. He had adjusted to the
military and he had nothing that wasn't military by the time he left Vietnam.
There was simply no place to go and no reason to be out of uniform, except in
camp and in quarters.
It was a pleasant place. The rolling hills and smiling faces greeted them as
they tackled the innards of the city. That's when they found it.
"That's it," Kodak said happily.
"Really? What's it?"
"Haight-Ashbury. See the sign?"
"Haight Street and Ashbury Street," Taz read.
"This is Haight."
"I don't hate anyone," Taz returned.
There was a change in the people who mingled about. They stood on corners, in
between cars parked along the street, in doorways, and huddling in the middle of
a sidewalk to talk. Most were brightly clad in the most outrageous of colors. It
was a little like entering Oz.
The boys wore hair as long as the girls. Some were even prettier. They waved at
passing cars that beeped. A hand shot into the air and without exception the one
finger salute had become two in this place. The first two fingers formed a V as
they held their palm outward and often yelled, "Peace."
Taz thought this to be particularly peculiar. Why peace?
As they climbed to the top of the hill, there were more and more colorfully
dressed kids for the most part. They all seemed to be in their middle or late
teens with the exception of twenty something's, with the men all wearing beards
to accompany their long hair.
"Doesn't anyone work?" Taz wondered aloud, walking around this gathering and
that.
"They're hippies," Kodak explained, as if that should explain it all.
"Oh, I've heard about hippies. They're weirder than I thought. Who dresses
them?" Taz asked amazed.
"They're non-conformist. Anti-establishment," Kodak stressed.
"You can say that again. Weird too. Why are they all so happy? I've never seen
so many happy people in one spot. Don't they know there are rules. No happiness.
It's one of the first things I learned."
"They've dropped out. No rules. Nothing to be unhappy about. It's like a
commune. They feed each other and if someone has a place to stay, they offer it
to whoever wants to spend time inside. Mostly they prefer being outdoors
together, when the weather cooperates."
"They sure do. They're really together up here," Taz said as they looked across
the street into Golden Gate Park where hundreds of people sat in small groups
all over that end of the park.
Once they stepped into the park there was a change in the relaxed atmosphere.
Many heads began to turn in their direction. Everyone was looking at Taz, his
creases tight, shoes highly polished, tie perfectly tied, and his ribbons
displayed on his dress uniform.
"It's not you, Colonel. It's your uniform," a fellow seated near Taz's feet
revealed.
"What?" Taz said, looking down at the speaker.
It was one of the older faces. He wore silver wire rim glasses that peered out
from between long blond hair that streamed down over his shoulders, down his
back, and the hair around his glasses dropped down onto a brightly colored
shirt. There were more colors than in a rainbow. There was an embroidered
headband circling his head. It was navy blue with brightly colored flowers
covering it. He wore pants that looked like jeans, but there were great streaks
of yellow amongst the blue of the jeans, and splotches that were almost white
but not quite.
"Baby killer," a distant voice interjected into the scene.
"What did he say?" Taz said.
Kodak felt Taz's forearm as it tensed with an uncoiled punch, as his fist
reacted naturally to the ultimate insult.
"Hey, Colonel, relax. Don't pay any attention to the children. They've got
brothers over there. Some have brothers in the ground. They don't understand the
war but they are no threat to you."
"Who the hell are you?" Taz snapped, feeling threatened, but he let his fist
relax, sensing the threat had passed.
"Solomon, Colonel. We're no threat to you," he said, sensing Taz's reaction.
"We're lovers, not fighters, friend. You are safe among us. Nothing but words
for weapons here."
"Safe here? You're damn right I'm safe anywhere I go. I'm a sergeant in the US
Army and I fight for you dudes," Taz explained a bit too loudly and with an
unexpected fervor in spite of where he was, perhaps because of it.
"If you're fighting for me, Colonel, don't. I don't know anyone in Vietnam. I
don't want anyone dead in Vietnam. I especially don't want you dead, friend,"
Solomon explained softly as a dozen long haired teens stood to come to stand
with the man who spoke of non-violence.
"I especially don't want anyone here to go there to kill the Vietnamese. We have
no desire to be in their country."
The new arrivals nodded and spoke their agreement with his comments. They were
very young.
"Here, friend. I want you to have this. You need it much more than I do. You'll
know what to do with it. You'll feel what it is."
The willowy man slipped a chain with a pendant the size of a silver dollar
dominating it from around his neck. He slipped it gently over Taz's head, while
Taz watched the ceremony, not ready to read anything offensive into it. The man
wasn't anymore threatening than a small puppy. Taz was on his turf and decided
to follow his customs. It was a curious charm. It was crude, handmade, and
different, like Solomon.
He seemed sincere and without hostility, which couldn't be said of all the
youngsters who stood with him. They were a mixture of black and white, young and
younger, and some wore peaceful expressions, while others looked hard on the
uniformed man in their midst.
"What is it?" Taz asked, curious and not willing to insult the gift giver.
"This is a peace sign. I make them. They represent my desire to spread universal
brotherhood and a gentle understanding between all people. You need to accept
its power, friend."
"Why do you think I need it?" Taz inquired, even more curious.
"I know things. I see things. I see your heart. It's a good heart, friend. You
are a good man who uses violence only when it is thrust upon you. Mislead
perhaps, perhaps not. Perhaps I'm not telling you anything you don't already
know. Take this gift in the spirit in which I give it. We shall part in peace
with my hope that one day we will all join in making peace in our universe, not
war.
"When you find that you no longer need this gift, or perhaps the time will come
you see someone who needs its power more than you, feel free to pass it along to
share the power of peace this symbol will provide.
"All of us here are part of the same dream, friend. Join us. This is what I know
and see. Peace be with you in your long journey."
Taz looked at the hand made peace symbol. Its simplicity was obvious but there
was a beauty in the design. Solomon flashed the peace sign as he turned to lead
his entourage into the hippie horde.
Kodak returned the peace sign as he'd seen it issued. He watched the unusual man
as people spoke his name, touched his hand as he passed, and always smiled with
their faces turned up to the sun.
"What do you make of that?" Taz asked.
"Wise guy," Kodak answered.
"Yeah, a regular wise guy all right. You think he was serious? You think this
hunk of metal has magical powers?"
"What wasn't serious? Seemed serious to me. Did you see how the kids reacted to
him? Strange."
"Me too. I wanted to punch someone there for a minute, but he did something to
me. I don't know what. You think this thing has power?" Taz asked, examining the
gift.
"If you believe it does. What does it hurt? The sentiment is one I like. I've
seen war and I like this a lot more. I love it. Look at them. They're all...
all... beautiful people."
"Yeah, but you dress like them," Taz said, looking at Kodak's yellow on green
outfit as bright as anything in the park. "You are like them... beautiful, you
know."
"I come in peace," Kodak said blushing. "That's about the nicest thing you've
ever said to me, Taz. It's the nicest thing anyone has ever said to me."
They didn't stay in the park. The looks weren't threatening but they did express
some alarm and apprehension by the lookers. Most were too young to know anything
about war but they obviously associated Taz's uniform with authority and
unpleasantness. These were the young escaping authority and seeking their
peaceful place. War was something they'd choose to avoid.
It was routinely bantered about that guys went to Canada to escape the draft.
Most of the hippies were too young to worry about it, but they weren't exactly
what the army was looking for either. You can force guys into uniform. You can
send them to Vietnam. Making warriors out of them was another matter.
The walk away from Golden Gate Park came with far more notice than the walk in.
The uniform brought long hard looks, stares of recognition and then concern. Taz
did his best not to allow these youngsters to upset him. He calculated most were
fifteen or sixteen, and he remembered being seventeen, when he first put on his
uniform. He thought these kids looked far too young for war and he wondered if
he'd been too young.
"Look at that," Kodak said. "You ever seen anything like it?"
The Volkswagen bus was multi-colored, flowered, and ablaze in stars and the
Milky Way. Taz and Kodak stopped to take a close-up look, and a tall lean young
man stepped out of the back, blocking any view they might get of the inside.
"Move along, soldier. You din't lose nothin' here," the frail looking lad
observed.
"We were just admiring the VW," Kodak said, smelling the acrid smoke as it
drifted out of the wide open door that gave access to the back of the bus.
"He's cool, Comanche. Look, he's wearing a peace symbol," a young girl explained
as she hopped from the back of the VW. "You been there, friend?"
"Just came back from there."
"Where'd you get the peace symbol," Comanche inquired, losing his tough edge.
"Solomon," Taz said, seeing the boy go from surly to sad.
"I got a brother over there, you know," Comanche said.
"Where?" came Taz's easy reply.
"Central Highlands. Haven't heard a word in over a month. I want to see him so
bad. We never got along, you know? I wouldn't even mind if he kicked my ass. I'd
like to know he's safe."
"What if I'd been him? Looking for you, say. I came down the block in my uniform
and some other guy jumps out of the VW. He says, 'Move along soldier' to me, but
you were in the back and didn't look out. I didn't look in, and so I didn't know
we were a few feet away from one another, and so I walked on and we never got to
see each other. What about that? Do you really want to turn away every soldier,
son?"
Taz wished to make his point in an imagery even a fifteen-year-old boy might
understand. He wasn't the army and he wasn't the war. It was okay for the kids
to hate both, but hating him was out of line. He was doing a job and got no say
in the matter. He wanted this kid to understand that. It was important to him.
If they needed someone to blame they'd need to start by looking beyond his
uniform.
Comanche stared into Taz's face. His eyes filled with tears. They ran like rain.
The boy sobbed. He put his arms around Taz and blubbered on his shoulder. Taz
looked at Kodak for instruction, but found a dumbfounded look to match his own.
Taz put his arms around the splinter of a boy, who was even thinner than he
looked.
"It's okay," Taz said. "The mail is slow in combat zones. They don't get it out
too often. They don't want to risk it. Your brother's probably fine and they
have a letter at home from him by now."
"You think so?" Comanche said, standing up tall and wiping his tears with the
back of his hands, first one and then the other.
"Sure thing," Taz reassured him with a smile. "I just wanted you to think of me
as a person. A soldier like your brother. I'm not that different from your
brother. We're in the army. We aren't the army."
"I know," Comanche said. "I'm sorry. You want some weed? It's some really good
shit."
"No," Taz laughed. "I don't think I need any of that."
"You're okay," Comanche observed. "I like you."
He smiled through the tears that still ran on his cheeks. He had pimples and his
front right tooth was chipped. He had a cleft chin and vividly blue eyes.
"You're okay, too, Comanche. Just remember we're people too. Your brother will
be okay."
"Yes, sir," Comanche said, becoming formal as he felt Taz's authority and
responded to it like a young boy in school.
"I know you," the little girl said. "I've seen you somewhere before. What's your
name?"
"No, I don't think I've ever been there," Taz said, looking to make a getaway
before someone came up with a copy of Time magazine.
Kodak started moving further down the hill on which they'd found the colorful VW
bus.
"Can I see you again? I know how to show a fellow a good time," the girl
bragged.
"Sharon," Comanche blurted. "You're my girl."
"I could be his girl too," she said, standing boldly, hands on hips as Taz and
Kodak laughed as they put distance between them and certain danger.
The only places where they'd stopped to sample a new kind of gathering, they had
been met with hostility. They parted with some understanding for the sentiment
of the fresh boyish faces and their starry-eyed girls, still looking for a few
good men.
Taz hadn't thought that much about going to Vietnam, except he knew he'd die
there. This was the attraction for him. Suicide by war sounded simple. With men
dying, bullets flying, and bombers dropping bombs, dying should be easy, he'd
thought, but he hadn't lived.
Taz had nothing to live for and so dying seemed like a good idea, but war is
unpredictable, a lot like life. He'd met someone who made life interesting
enough for Taz to want to take a shot at living.
Two very different lives cross paths and form an unbreakable bond. Like war,
love is unpredictable. The chemistry is a mystery. Two elements combine, forming
a compound that's so strong bullets and bombs can't pull them apart.
Taz and Kodak have survived war. What remains to be seen is if they can survive
a culture that hates men who love each other.
To be continued...
Posted: 02/14/20