KKMC
We boarded the plane and stowed most of our gear, then
we realized that there is no good place to put a rifle on an airplane. I can’t
recall exactly what we did with them. I just remember that M16s don’t fit in
the overhead bin or under the seat. I had never been in a DC-9 before or since.
We were informed by the flight crew that whatever had caused all those DC-9s to
break in half and fall out of the sky had been corrected in this one. That was
somewhat reassuring and I hadn’t heard of one crashing in quite a while. The
flight crew consisted of middle-aged men with military haircuts. It turns out
that they were retired Naval Reservists who’d been recalled to active duty. The
crappy airline food was the only familiar thing about that flight.
When we landed at the King Khalid Military City
Airport we went to a regular airport terminal. The place appeared deserted. The
bus wasn’t ready or it wasn’t there. We waited what seemed like a long time in
some sort of lounge area. It was long enough that most of us shed our Load
Bearing Equipment and gas masks. Finally, it was time to move on. We all put on
our LBE and all but one of us strapped our masks back on our hips. We were
ordered to get in line and go down the hall. I was at the front but not at the
head of the line. When we came to the deserted security checkpoint the first
soldier in line stopped in front of the metal detector, perplexed. Everyone
stopped. Our mildly frustrated Platoon Sergeant said “Just go.” We went. I
cannot fully describe the mildly perverse thrill of strolling through an
airport metal detector carrying an M16 and seven thirty round magazines full of
ammo.
It is not supposed to be that hot in February! I
didnt expect to see snow on the ground like there was when we boarded the
plane in Germany but I didn’t expect summer like in Texas, either. Being in the
un-air-conditioned school bus was worse than being outside. A few familiar
military tents were scattered but the giant white, metal reinforced tents
caught my attention the most. They were the biggest tents I’ve seen to this
day. They dwarfed German beer hall tents of similar design at carnivals.
Instead of picnic tables and a stage, they were filled with a sea of green army
cots. Our assigned tent was about three quarters full. We grabbed our cots in
an orderly military fashion. That means we knew to start at the end of the
taken cots and left no empties. Other than that, it was a free for all.
Boredom was the enemy after we’d chosen cots and laid
out our sleeping bags. We sharpened bayonets and cleaned rifles. We told
stories and discussed our biggest fears. I drew a Slayer pentagram on the back
of my helmet cover. A Slayer pentagram is missing a line in the star. Their
songs aren’t any more evil than a Stephen King story, so their symbol is just
short of evil. Under this incomplete inverted pentagram, I wrote the name of
their most relevant song. I spelled out our greatest fear in capital letters:
“CHEMICAL WARFARE”. The lyrics ran continually through my mind.
Frantic minds are terrified
Life lies in a grave
Silent death rides high above
On the wings of revelation
Multi death from chemicals
Arrogance has won
Annihilation must be swift
Destroy without destruction
Gods on the throne must be watching from hell
Awaiting the mass genocide
Soldiers defeated by death from a smell
Bodies lie dormant no life
Rising new souls on the lands where they fell
Demons not ready to die
Nothing to see where the sleeping souls lie
Chemical warfare
The
song I used to bang my head to with abandon, was far too real now. Saddam
Hussein had chemical weapons, Scud missiles to deliver them to us, and was not
afraid to use them. Gas masks and the missile defense system, known as Patriot
Missiles, were our only defenses. It was truly sinking in that I was in Desert
Storm. This was war.
At some unknown point that night the lights suddenly came
on. We heard “GAS! GAS! GAS!” This is where the training kicks in. No one was
counting the nine seconds to clear and seal a gas mask. Everyone was clearing
and sealing their masks. Everyone but Specialist Albright, that is. Albright
had left his mask at the airport. If this was real, Albright was going to die
convulsing and choking. After properly fitting his mask, Private First Class
Montgomery joined Albright on the other end of his cot with the bayonet that
Albright had helped sharpen. Albright asked “Are you sure you can do this?” Montgomery
replied “I won’t be able not to.” They were locked in an empathetic staring
contest with no possible winner. Montgomery was poised to stab Albright in the
heart, should he start convulsing. Albright trusted that Montgomery would save
him from a torturous death. Montgomery was prepared to provide final mercy to
his brother in arms and face the possible consequences of stabbing his fellow
soldier to death. This is what soldiers will do for each other.
All eyes were on Albright, as he stoically maintained
his composure. Only the tears, slowly streaming from his eyes, gave away his
terror. There was a distant explosion. Another eternity passed, as the staring
contest persisted.
“ALL CLEAR!” was what we’d been waiting for. We were
told that the Patriot Missile had perfectly performed its duty and the Scud
didn’t carry a chemical warhead. We put our masks back in their covers. We put
our covered masks back on the appropriate corner of our cots. We eventually
went back to sleep. Then, the lights came on again. Panic ruled the moment. Before
I could put on my mask, I realized that it was only the wake up call. I was not
alone. Nervous laughter filled the gigantic tent. What a relief! Where is
Montgomery? He’s not here. He appeared, shortly. He told us the story of why he
was gone.
“I hadta piss, real bad, so I found the nearest place.
I saw a pile of concrete blocks that looked good. So there I was letting it go,
when a Platoon Sergeant caught me. He said, ‘Well, you fucked up.’ I said, ‘What’r’ya’gonna
do, send me to war?’ He said ‘Worse, shit burning detail!'”
Works Cited
Slayer. Haunting
the Chapel. Metal Blade, 1984. EP.