Jungle Rules (80 page)

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Authors: Charles W. Henderson

BOOK: Jungle Rules
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“He’s down at Hilton Head, South Carolina,” Wayne said, and smiled. “Pushing eighty years old, I guess, and Stanley tells me the old fart plays golf every day.”
“Good for Dicky Doo!” Terry said and looked at Gwen and laughed. “He and Stanley never figured out what gave them the shits, did they.”
“Terry, I have borne the guilt of doing that to those poor men like a millstone tied to my neck!” Gwen said, and then laughed, too. “Thank God they didn’t figure it out. I might have gone to jail! I certainly would have had no chance of ever working at any airline either.”
“Might be fun to tell Stanley now,” Terry said with a laugh.
“No, it might not,” Wayne said, and then sighed. “I called Dicky Doo, and invited him, too. He said he’d have to think it over and talk to his ball and chain—his words, not mine.”
“Ball and chain?” Gwen laughed. “Oh, I might find some more of that magic powder then and fix him another drink! Can you imagine a man these days calling his wife a ball and chain?”
“So, he’s listed in the directory, too?” Terry asked, and then looked at his watch, wondering what kept Lobo and Buck.
“Yeah,” Wayne said and smiled. “After Stanley called me, I got to looking and found our favorite mojo. It lists his home address, telephone number, and electronic mail. Want a good laugh? Guess what he has for an Internet address.”
“I wouldn’t have a clue,” Terry said, not wanting to think too hard about the man who tormented him during most of his tour in Vietnam.
“Believe it or not, its Dicky Doo at Earthlink dot com,” Wayne said and howled laughing.
“I don’t believe you!” O’Connor said with a laugh, and looked at Gwen and Vibeke, who laughed, too. “I wonder who told him?”
“I asked Colonel Dickinson about it and he laughed,” Ebberhardt said. “Charlie Heyster told him. Kept him filled in on all our dirty deeds.”
“He never figured out that Jon and Movie Star loosened the bolts on his furniture though, did he,” O’Connor said with a smile and nodded confidently. “Not even after he moved into Colonel Prunella’s old office. The stuff kept wobbling and the lamps kept flashing, and he never had a clue, did he.”
“I don’t know, he might surprise you,” Wayne said and noticed the lights above the elevators outside the double glass doors that led into the reception area flash across the numbers and stop on fifteen. “I didn’t think to ask him about the furniture, but I did inquire about his fair-haired boy Charlie Heyster.”
“All I ever knew about the shyster was that General Cushman didn’t even let him spend the night in Da Nang after Lieutenant Biggs arrested him. They put him on a gooney bird to the rock, and that’s the last anybody saw of him,” O’Connor said, looking out at the elevators, too. “Jon said that they kept him overnight in Okinawa, then flew him to Camp Pendleton, where they tossed him in the brig.”
“Matches pretty close to what Dickinson told me,” Ebberhardt said, nodding in agreement. “You ever wonder why nobody asked for those photographs, or none of us had to ever testify? It just all disappeared like fog?”
“Yeah!” Terry O’Connor said, sitting up. “I stayed pissed off for a couple of years. I figured they let him slide and reassigned him someplace, or worst case, let him resign.”
“Dicky Doo told me that Charlie bought a plea deal in exchange for all the names of the people he supplied with dope,” Wayne said and shook his head. “Of course, the Marine Corps yanked his commission, busted him to private, dismissed him from the service, and put him on ice for two years of hard labor at Portsmouth. However, he avoided serving ten. Got disbarred, though, thank goodness. The three deadly D’s—disgraced, dismissed, and disbarred.”
“So the dirty bastard did time after all,” O’Connor said, and let out a deep sigh. “Wonder what he’s doing now? Hell, I wonder what just about anyone we tried to keep out of the brig is doing these days.”
“Dickinson said that Heyster managed to put together enough money to open a used-car dealership in Oakland,” Ebberhardt said, noticing a familiar hulk stepping out of the elevator. “He’s been in touch with him off and on. I guess Heyster’s doing okay selling cars. It broke Dicky Doo’s heart, though, when Charlie went down in flames.”
“Kind of disproved his theory about the good guys and the bad guys,” O’Connor shrugged, and looked at the mass of humanity that ambled toward his reception area.
“Hey, shit for brains!” Archie Gunn bellowed at Terry O’Connor as he pushed open the double glass doors that led to his suite of offices. “You know, we need to get rocking and rolling if we’re going to swoop down to Dallas and pick up that jockstrap McKay and his little Mexican-cutie wife, Marguerite, and still get to Denver in time to have dinner tonight at Stockman’s Steakhouse.”
“Where’s Buck?” Terry said, grabbing his briefcase, and luggage he had staged in the corner of the reception area.
“Down there keeping that fruitcake company that’s driving our limo,” Lobo said, grabbing two handfuls of suitcases and helping the four people get to the elevator. “Good thing this is just for the holiday weekend, or I’d have to hire a truck for your extra shit.”
“Speaking of fruitcakes,” Wayne Ebberhardt said, pushing the down button on the elevator, “I take it that we’re not taking a jag to Boston to pick up Mikie and his life companion, Tab?”
“Fuck, no,” Lobo said, and then looked at the ladies. “Oh, sorry. Shit, no! The twirp has some kind of rally tonight. Something to do with gay marriage and taking it before the Supreme Court. He and Tab will fly tomorrow. I’ve got a car picking them up at DIA about noon.”
“Oh, yes, he called me about wanting to hire one of our partners at this firm to argue the gay marriage case before the Supreme Court, if they can get it heard by the Court, of course,” Terry said, and smiled. “Mikie’s their lead man in pressing the issue before the courts.”
“As long as they have that nitwit Carter in charge,” Lobo said, shoving the double armloads of luggage onto the elevator as the doors opened, “we won’t have to worry about gay marriage anytime soon.”
“So Archie, how’s business with that chain of sporting goods stores you have, Lobo Sports?” Wayne Ebberhardt said, getting on the elevator.
“We’re opening a super center in Atlanta,” Lobo said, putting his arm around Gwen’s shoulders and giving her a lusty squeeze. “That makes me coast to coast. One hundred seventeen stores. Amazing what a guy can do with a handful of fishing reels and hunting rifles.”
“Buck’s still your chief financial officer and vice chairman of the board?” Terry said, and slapped his old friend across the back.
“Yeah, but the shithead’s talking about wanting to retire and go fishing every day at Corpus Christi,” Lobo said and laughed. “Shit, he doesn’t have to retire to do that!”
 
A FINE MIST lay over Bangkok and formed a halo of light above the Normandy Restaurant, which sat atop the main tower of the famous, old Oriental Hotel. Its luminance caught the eye of Brian Pitts, who stood dressed in black silk pajamas and matching velvet slippers at one of the ten cathedral widows that lined one side of his five-thousand-square-foot penthouse atop the skyscraper owned by his construction company. He gazed into the lonely wet night and at the lifeless lights below, and he watched the endless traffic of barges pushing their loads down the river, past the grand, five-star hotel set at the water’s edge, and its restaurant with its circle of light.
For the past several years he found himself sleeping less and less as he spent night after night alone with only his thoughts, his memories, and his regrets for company as he looked out the big windows of his palace, gazing upon the city that waited at his feet. While he stood his solitary vigil, night after monotonous night, he often thought of his Aunt Winnie Russell, now ninety-two years old, stubbornly living in her modest frame house in Olathe, Kansas, despite his incessant invitations to come reside with him in Thailand. Never giving up on the boy she loved as a son, she had the housekeepers and home health nurse, whose wages her dear nephew paid, keep the room above the garage tidy, in case Brian ever decided to come home.
INDEX
AA form
ADF.
See
Automatic Direction Finder
Aerial photos, at CCOC
AFVN.
See
American Forces Vietnam Radio
AHCobra helicopter
Air America
hijacking of
in Vietnam
Alcohol, consumption of .
See also
Entertainment; Marine Corps
Alice pack
Ambush, of trucks
Americal division.
See
d Infantry “Americal” Division
American Communist Party
American Forces Vietnam Radio (AFVN) .
See also
Radio
Anderson, Norman J.
Animal Tracks
(album)
ARcarbine
Armed services, U.S.
buying off from
draft dodgers from
draft for
politics and
regulations/justice for
service choice under
Army Special Forces
Article fifteen.
See also
Nonjudicial punishment
Articles of War, British, as Rocks and Shoals
Artillery
call in
as cover
of Eleventh Marine Regiment
from LZ Ross
of Seventh Marine Regiment
ARVN units
A Shau Valley
Assault and battery, charges of
Assault, sexual, by Marine
Associated Press
Automatic Direction Finder (ADF)
 
B-rocket launcher
Bachelor Officers’ Quarters (BOQ)
Bandits.
See
North Vietnam Army
Basic School, at Quantico
Battle of Belleau Wood
Beef and rocks.
See
-rations
Belleau Wood Battle
Big Bend
Bigotry .
See also
Racism
Binoculars
Bird Airways
Black market, in Dogpatch
Black Panthers
Blacks, racism against
Black Stone Rangers
charges for
cooperation by
demands by
escape by
at Freedom Hill
hierarchy of
kangaroo court by
leadership by
negotiation by
prisoner release by
release of
riot by
surrender by
threats by
trial by
Black syphilis
Blood of Dead Marines
Blue Angels
Body odor, diet for
Bomb, general-purpose
Booby traps
along roads
by NVA
BOQ.
See
Bachelor Officers’ Quarters
Bordellos.
See also
Prostitution
in Dogpatch
Boredom, from nonaction
Brig
Da Nang Air Base
defense, negotiation and
drugs for dispensary of
on Freedom Hill
for Marine Amphibious Force (MAF)
British Articles of War.
See
Articles of War, British
Bronze Star with Combat
Brown, Bernice Layne
Brown, Edmund G.
Buddha, as drug
Bunker, operations
Burdon, Eric
Burma white.
See also
Drugs
Burned out syndrome
 
C-
C-Starlifter
Call of the Wild
(London)
Call sign.
See also
Radio for radio shark bait as
Cambodia, special teams in Camp Butler
Camp Carroll
Camp Courtney.
See also
Okinawa
Camp Pendleton
Canada, draft dodgers in
Cannons, fire power of
Carter, Michael
CCOC, aerial photos at
Central Intelligence Agency (CIA)
Civil Operations and Revolutionary Development under
ICEX under
Ceremony, decoration.
See also
Heroism
CH-Sea Knight helicopter
Chaplains, Marine
Chapman, Leonard F., Jr.
Charge sheet .
See also
Disciplinary action
Charlie.
See
Viet Cong
Charlie Med
as hospital
med evac to
Charlie Ridge
Cheney, Richard
Chicago Tribune
China Beach
military facilities near
party at
R and R at
Chosin Reservoir
Chu Lai
Americal division at
dope supply for
holding facility at
homicide at
Marine Wing Support Group Seventeen at
murder at
PMO at
racism at

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