We were heading for Chau Luc rubber plantation in the northern part of
Phuoc Tuy Province, not far from the Courteney rubber. You may remember it was in January/February
where Killer was killed about two months
ago. We were going back to do some more ambushing. This is much
better than stumbling around the jungle and finding Nigel waiting for us in his
bunker systems. We are apprehensive because we only have six weeks left
in country; but ambushing is good.
“Knackers, Knackers.........”
“Huh?”
“Saddle up Knackers we move in
five.” Whispered Moon.
Shit, something must be up. We are in a harbour come ambush setting, it’s
still dark and we are going to move? I checked my watch, it was 0430. I slid out of my silk and pulled on my
boots. The boots are laced with one
single long lace – all I do is pull them on and tighten the laces – ezy in the
dark. I quickly roll up the silk and
groundsheet and stuff them in my pack, took a swig of water, had a leak; and I was
ready to go.
We don’t normally move at night,
it’s too risky. Not only could we get
ambushed, but it is also quite easy for us to lose contact with each other and
become separated. In the dark all
shadowy figures look alike; and scary.
After about twenty minutes of
slow progress we are lined up in a ditch, dawn is not far away. I peer into the blackness and I can make out
a couple of huts about 80 yards ahead, must be a village. I can see smoke drifting ever so faintly from
inside the village, but I can’t see any activity. I make myself as comfortable as I can and
wait.
Suddenly over to the left is the
tell tale sound of mortar primaries going pop, pop, pop. Seconds later the rounds are landing on top
of us. A combination of blinding light,
deafening explosions and trembling earth unleashes its fury. Dirt and debris is raining down on top of me. Moon gives the order to move forward, we
certainly can’t stay here but where the hell are we going to go?
Instantly we are on the
village. “Keep moving, keep moving” Moon
yells. Then it happened. I felt a wave a hot air pick me up and fling
me into the air. There is a buzzing in
my head. The flash of brilliant light
has killed my night vision. I am aware
that I am hurtling through the air, yet I am not afraid. Am I dead?
I smashed into one of the huts,
it collapsed and buried me under a pile of rubble. My hearing and vision return as my brain
tries to comprehend what is happening.
It only lasts for a fleeting moment, then I black out.
I’m awake. I dunno how long I was out to it, but I am
aware that there is sunlight about, but not directly shining onto me. I am lying on my back. I feel a lot of weight pressing down on my
body. I am having difficulty breathing
because of the weight on my chest. My
whole body is still. I try to
stretch. I can feel my fingers and my
toes. A good sign. I twist and turn, and roll over onto my belly
and try to get up. I feel the rubble on
top of me give way and I stretch up onto my knees. My back aches but I am in one piece.
As I step out of the rubble I can
see that the scene around me is very bleak indeed. I smell a mixture of smoke and cordite. The whole area is devastated. The trees and vegetation are flattened and singed,
but not burnt. Everything is coated in
black. Some stumps are emitting smoke,
but there are no flames.
Where is everyone?
I check myself out. My greens are ripped and torn. My right upper arm is scratched but the
bleeding has stopped. My greens are
mostly black now rather than green. My
boots are OK but I have no rifle, no webbing; and no bloody radio!
Where is everyone?
I hear a murmur over to my right. It’s coming from another collapsed hut. I move towards it, oh, my right leg hurts a
bit too. There’s someone trapped in the
rubble of the hut. I pull the dried
reeds away and I can see a body of a women dressed in a white blouse and black
pyjama pants, a typical South Vietnamese dress.
She is struggling. I notice her
eyes are covered by a blind fold, there is another piece of material around her
neck. It must have covered her mouth and
she managed to pull it free. Her hands
and feet are bound tightly.
I remove the blindfold. A pair of piercing black eyes stare up at me
in terror. Her mouth opens to speak but
she says nothing as if her brain is processing something. Her eyes start to crinkle, “Kevin? Kevin?”
she shouts.
I stand there just looking at
her.
“Kevin, me Lin, you me, number one boom boom , Vung
Tau.
(You will recall that Lin could not pronounce my name, the best she could do was 'Kevin.")
(You will recall that Lin could not pronounce my name, the best she could do was 'Kevin.")
“Lin? Is that really you?” I
enquire. What in the hell is she doing
here? And why is she tied up? So I quickly untie her hands and feet. Lin jumps to her feet, throws her arms around
me and gives me a big pash on my lips.
She never did that last time we met and besides I can tell she had
garlic with her last meal.
Lin went on to tell me that she
was a sex slave in Vung Tau. Her parents
were very famous people in North Vietnam when she and her mother were kidnapped
for ransom money. Her mother was kept
under guard at Baria and she was made into a sex slave. She couldn’t escape otherwise they would kill
her mother.
“So how come you ended up here?”?
I asked.
“My mother die, so me escape from
Vung Tau. Me hitch ride north but White
Mice catch me, hold me here.”
“Well maybe I can help, come with
me.” I take Lin’s hand and head east towards the main road. “We should be able to flag down a passing
military vehicle.”
“Dứng
dừng lại!” A male voice rings out from
behind us. We turn and face two men both
with AK47s about 50 yards away. Their
weapons are pointing right at us. I pick
up a lump of wood, face the two men; and push Lin behind me.
The
men are dressed in khaki uniforms. They
are NVA. They are both in their twenties,
one is tall and one is short. They move in closer, a smirk covers the face of
the shorter soldier.
“You
drop stick, GI.”
“I’m
not a GI you dumb piece of shit. Me Uc
da loi.”
“Ah,
Uc da loi, drop stick, now.” He demands shaking his rifle in my direction.
They
came in close, weapons pointing at me.
The taller soldier is facing me, the shorter guy is off to my right.
“Quay lại.” I did
as Shorty demanded, I turned around.
Stretch grabbed my arms, pulled them behind my back; and tied my hands
together.
I turned back around and faced
Stretch. He was nearly my height,
unusually tall for Vietnamese. He had
acne scaring on his face. His eyes were
bloodshot and he had a smirk on his face.
He was an ugly son of a bitch.
We locked eyes, then I smashed my
forehead into his nose spreading it across his face as blood splattered all
directions. He fell like a rock. Before Shorty could bring his AK up to fire I
stabbed my right leg out, my foot was parallel to the ground as I hit the side
of his right knee. His leg collapsed
inward. He yelped, dropped his rifle;
and he crumpled to a heap on the ground.
Stretch was on his elbows and knees holding his face in his hands. I kicked him in the guts to open up his body,
he half rolled away from me and as his hands dropped away from his face I drove
my boot into it. “Take that Nigel you
ugly prick!” His body flattened out and he
was still. I spun back to Shorty and kicked
him again. I collected his face with the
heal of my right boot as I swung my leg with plenty of power and a good follow
through, just like a footballer kicking a goal at fulltime to score the winning points against Manly. He sprawled onto his back. He was out cold.
“Quick Lin untie me.” I grabbed both
AK47s and we ran east to the road. The
road was deserted. Normally there is
plenty of traffic about. We sat down on
the side of the road and waited. I
suggested we head south to Nui Dat. Lin
said she wanted to head north, back home to her father.
Soon a motorcyclist appeared from
the north, he was travelling at a fair clip of speed. I walked out onto the road and pointed the
rifle at him with my right hand and held my left hand up with my palm facing
towards him – the universal halt sign.
The rider pulled up quickly. I
motioned for him to get off the bike and sit in the ditch on the side of the
road. “Í’ll trade your bike for this
AK47” I said as I removed the magazine, took all the rounds out, placed it back
on the weapon and threw it down beside him.
I grabbed the bike, tossed the crate of chickens off it and said to Lin,
“Hop on Lin.” I gunned the 125cc Honda
and we headed north towards the coast.
Pretty soon we came to a coastal
township, somewhere unaffected by the war.
Lin urged me to stop and she disappeared into a shop. She emerged seconds later and headed from a
phone booth. She spoke on the phone for
about ten minutes while I sat there on the Honda admiring the women passing by
in their Ao Dais
“I get picked up tomorrow at
dawn,” said Lin with a gleam in her eye.
I looked at my watch and it was 1500, dawn was at 0600.
“I need some food and water” as I
motioned over towards a hotel. We
entered the foyer, we were both extremely grubby and dirty and I had the AK47
slung over my shoulder. I told Lin to
trade the AK47 for a room and some food as I slumped down in a chair. I was totally rooted. A few moments later Lin returned with a smile
on her face and the keys to a room in her hand, “This way,” she said.
Room 79 eh? Wooly would be pleased. Hey the blokes? I didn’t know what happened to
them. How did we get separated? Were
they out searching for me? “Kevin need
shower.” Lin removed my greens and noticed the wound on my arm. “Poor Kevin.”
“It’s only a scratch, Lin,” I
said as she led me to the shower and started to wash me. She gently massaged my body, dried me off;
and made me feel a whole lot better as only a woman can do for a man. I fell asleep before room service arrived.
Lin woke me at 0500 with a hot
breakfast of toast eggs and coffee. I
demolished the lot. Then we made love again and I took another shower. I emerged from the bathroom and there on the
bed were my greens washed and ironed. I
picked them up and I could see that the torn pieces were expertly sewn and
repaired. My boots were black and shiny
and there was a clean pair of socks laid across the top of them.
“Take me to beach?”
“What’s happening Lin?”
“Me ring father, they pick me up at 6.”
“Who’s they? What does your father do?
“My father he king of North
Vietnam.”
“King? What do you mean King?
“Me part of North Vietnam royal
family, me Princess Lin.”
“A bloody princess? You’re joking. Right?”
“You save my life Kevin. Come with me, you will be rewarded.”
“I can’t leave my mates behind –
they need me Lin. I must find them.”
“You take me to beach?”
“OK, I’ll take you to beach.”
The Honda was stored out
back. It fired up easily and the
headlight worked OK. Not a bad trade for
an AK47. We rode down to the beach, got
off the bike and walked to the southern end of the beach. We sat down and Lin cradled in under my sore
arm. She looked up into my eyes and gave
me another great pash on the lips. What in
the world did she have for breakfast?
More garlic?
Then I heard it. The unmistakable sound of a helicopter, a large
helicopter. It was coming in from the
east, heading straight for the southern part of the beach. Lin flashed a light a couple of times and it
loomed out of the darkness; a bloody giant Russian helicopter!
It landed on the beach. Lin asked me one more time for me to go with
her. I told her it was impossible. Lin looked into my eyes, gave me a tender
kiss and said “Me never forget Kevin, Lin love Kevin.”
“Kevin love Lin too,” I
whispered. She turned and ran to the helicopter. The engines roared, it lifted off, turned,
and with it’s nose down, flew back out
to sea. I paused there on the beach for
a long time. What the hell was that all
about I wondered. Then reality kicked
in. I returned to the hotel, room 79,
ordered more food; and when my belly was full I took a nap. I woke at 1000 and began my journey back to
The Dat on that great little 125cc Honda.
The CSM, mother couldn’t believe
it when he saw me. “We thought you were
captured Knackers, there’s still a group, your old mates from 6 section, out
looking for you.”
“Well I’m here now. What’s for dinner?”
The boys were happy to see
me. Should I tell them about Lin? Would they believe me? I doubt it.
So I left out the bits involving Lin.
I went back to the Q store and got some new gear, we were due to deploy
again in two days. I’d better get my
shit together.
The next day the OC called a
parade. This is unusual we thought, Capt
B is not one to stand on ceremony. So at
0900 we marched down to the company parade ground. The CSM handed over to Capt B who stood there
with his hands on his hips, a big beaming smile came over his lips. “Men.
The war is over.”
There was silence, just a company
of dumb grunts standing there with our mouths open.
North Vietnam has instigated a
ceasefire. They are withdrawing their
troops back north. There will be no more
fighting. Well the company erupted into
hoopin’ and a hollerin’. Bush hats were
thrown into the air. Troops danced
around each other, backs were slapped, but there was no kissing.
“OK men settle down. I guess you want to know how this came
about. It seems that the King’s daughter
was rescued by Australian soldiers, probably those elite SAS boys.
“He was so pleased his daughter was returned
safely to him that he pressed the government to introduce an immediate cease
fire and end the war. The war is over!”
“Knackers, Knackers.....”
“Huh?”
“Your time for picquet mate.....”
8 comments:
Just be patient Hosko, big story this chapter, so stay tuned.
Those brown bit are rubber plantations - they dry out during the dry season.
I'm away for a couple of days, so it'll be a few days yet.
You had me till it started to sound more like 'Bond Knackers Bond"
Good one.
See you do have talent for writting!
Hosko
hey james (bond) that is you should be in movies
Hey James(Bond) that is you should be in movies
Capitals is better much more correct Wazwile
Cav
We had a soldier have a nightmare during a company harbour. He fired off half a dozen rounds at about 4am at nothing in particular.
Was not funny....
hi cav
i found your site while researching Capt Barry Petersen. i have gone back to Chapter 1 and am slowly going through your memoirs - they are good, haven't got to the hard stuff yet. thought i would say 'thank you' for showing us civvies what you guys went through and still going through. i have first to fight and will look you guys up in that book - correct the book where is applicable.
dorothy
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