Read Death Coming Up the Hill Online
Authors: Chris Crowe
every red-blooded
Â
man's duty to spill
that blood when America
called on him for it.
Â
Mom's an anti-war
dove who gave me a “Hell no,
I won't go!” tee shirt
Â
for Christmas, and she'd
convinced Dad and me that I
had to enroll at
Â
ASU as soon
as I finished high school. “The
student deferment
Â
will keep you out of
the draft,” she said, “and unless
we're really stupid,
Â
this war will be done
by the time you graduate.”
Dad didn't mind the
Â
deferment. “You can
join the ROTC and
graduate as an
Â
officer,” he said.
“The Army needs smart leaders
who can help put an
Â
end to the spread of
Communism over in
Vietnam.” But when
Â
I thought about the
four hundred seventy-one
guys who died last week,
Â
I knew I'd go to
college to
avoid
the war,
not prepare for it.
Â
I just hoped the war
ended before I had to
decide, because Dad
Â
didn't need any
more ammunition to use
against my mother.
January 1968
Week Five: 406
Â
Everybody was
talking about the new team
coming to Phoenix.
Â
At supper, Dad looked
over the newspaper and
said, “Pro basketball
Â
in the desert?” He
shook his head. “It'll be a
huge waste of money.
Â
Phoenix will never
have the market to sustain
an NBA team.
Â
Besides, basketball's
a black man's game, and we don't
need to go out of
Â
our way to attract
more of
them
to the valley.
It's already bad
Â
enough with all the
Mexicans we've got to put
up with around here.”
Â
Mom stood up and left
without finishing supper
or saying a word.
Â
Dad put the paper
down and sighed. “I am tired of
your mother's protests.”
â
  â
  â
Mom has always been
sensitive, smart, and involved.
She cries when she reads
Â
about the deaths in
Vietnam, and the racist
murders in the South,
Â
and anything else
that shows people at their worst.
She liked to tell me,
Â
“The Beatles are right,
Ashe: all you need is love.” When
she'd say that, Mom looked
Â
a starving kind of
lonely. I knew she meant that
America and
Â
the rest of the world
would be better off if love
somehow trumped hatred,
Â
but I also knew
she wanted love for herself.
Even though she lived
Â
with me and Dad, she
was lonely, and no amount
of activism
Â
could fill the awful
emptiness that made her yearn
for true, lasting love.
February 1968
Week Six: 400
Â
Mr. Ruby pinned
a newspaper photo on
the bulletin board.
Â
It wasn't a stock
picture of atrocities:
no naked corpses
Â
littered the jungle
floor, no burned-out huts smoldered
with napalm. No dead
Â
bodies were in sight,
but it was a scene of death
caught right in the act.
Â
A Vietnamese
police chief stood with his back
to the camera;
Â
his right arm was raised,
holding a pistol inches
from a skinny kid's
Â
head. The kid wore a
baggy plaid shirt, and his hands
were tied behind his
Â
back. The cop looked as
quiet as the empty street
behind them, and the
Â
fog of war cast a
haze over the buildings in
the background. The kid's
Â
eyes were closed, and the
side of his head looked flattened,
as if a sudden
Â
burst of air had smacked
him. Though I couldn't see the
bullet, I knew I
Â
was witnessing an
execution in Saigon.
In the photograph
Â
a Vietnamese
soldier looked on, smiling. The
looks of anguish, joy,
Â
and businesslike death
in that photo made me feel
sick to my stomach.
â
  â
  â
Nothing good lasted
at home. Mom attended an
anti-war rally
Â
again, and Dad flipped
out. Even upstairs in my
hideout, I could hear
Â
the yelling. But last
night was different. Mom used
to stand up to Dad,
Â
to throw it right back
at him, but the only voice
I heard was Dad's, and
Â
he was really cranked.
There'd be a lull in his storm,
and I'd listen for
Â
Mom to shout back, but
nothing. I heard nothing. A
terrifying thought
Â
seized me. Had he hit
her? Was she hurt? In the past,
nothing could silence
Â
Mom. I crept to my
door, listening and waiting.
And then Dad's roaring
Â
returned, and I felt
a weird kind of relief. Not
because of his rage,
Â
but because it meant
that Mom was okay. I mean,
even Dad wouldn't
Â
scream at someone who's
unconscious. Mom was still there,
I knew that, but she
Â
wasn't fighting back,
at least not the way she used
to. Something
had
changed.
February 1968
Week Seven: 543
Â
I was six years old
when I realized that my
parents didn't love
Â
each other. Dad and
I were playing catch in the
backyard, and Mom sat
Â
on the patio
reading a book. It took a
little while to get
Â
the hang of it, but
pretty soon I caught every
ball Dad tossed to me.
Â
“That's my boy,” he said,
and patted my head. I leapt
into his arms, like
Â
a puppy, and he
hugged me. While in his embrace
I pleaded, “Mom, come
Â
on!” She must have seen
my eagerness, so she set
her book down and stood
Â
next to us. I looped
one arm around Dad's neck and
reached my other arm
Â
around Mom's. Feeling
their love for me, I tugged to
pull them closer, to
Â
knit us into a
tight group hug, but Dad leaned right
and Mom leaned left, and
Â
I spanned the distance
between them like a bombed-out
bridge. The love I had
Â
felt fell into the
gulf between them, and I knew
they loved me, but not
Â
each other. That's a
crummy thing to learn when you're
only six years old.
â
  â
  â
So I grew up in
divided territory,
a home with clearly
Â
defined boundaries
that my parents rarely crossed.
Most of the time we
Â
lived under a cease-
fire interrupted by
occasional flare-
Â
ups. Sadly, the key
members of my family
couldn't hold
Â
together, so my
heart was torn, equal shares of
love for Mom and Dad.
February 1968
Week Eight: 470
Â
On the board, Mr.
Ruby had “Orangeburg, South
Carolina” and
Â
had written below
that: “3: 17, 18,
and 19.” I knew
Â
those weren't the weekly
Vietnam casualties,
but they had to be
Â
important somehow.
What happened in Orangeburg?
That night, I went to
Â
the Tempe Public
Library to see what I
could find about it.
â
  â
  â
The library was
quiet when I entered, and
the librarian
Â
shot me a look that
said I better make sure it
stayed that way. Nodding,
Â
I headed to the
newspaper shelf that had a
couple weeks' worth of
Â
The New York Times
in
tidy stacks and started to
go through them. It took
Â
a while, but I found
a small article about
a riot started
Â
by some Negro kids
because they weren't allowed in
a segregated
Â
bowling alley. They
commenced making trouble, and
when the cops showed up,
Â
the mob threw rocks and
bricks, and those Southern police
don't put up with that
Â
stuff, especially
from Negroes, so they started
shooting people. When
Â
it was all over,
twenty-eight people were hurt
and three people were
Â
dead: eighteen-year-old
Samuel Hammond, Jr.;
a nineteen-year-old
Â
kid by the name of
Henry Ezekial Smith;
and a boy about
Â
my age, Delano
Herman Middleton, who was
only seventeen.
Â
I set the paper
down and wondered what could make
a bunch of people
Â
mad enough to start
rioting when they knew the
streets were patrolled by
Â
trigger-happy cops
looking for an excuse to
punish protestors.
Â
Blacks had it lousy,
especially in the South,
but did they really
Â
think a riot would
make things better? Buried deep
in the
Times,
like it
Â
didn't matter, the
story made me realize
Vietnam wasn't
Â
the only place where
Americans were getting
killed. It's happening
Â
here at home, too, but
no one is counting the ghosts
sprouting on our soil.
March 1968
Week Nine: 542
Â
To Dad, the news was
like church, and Walter Cronkite
was its pastor. But
Â
after last Tuesday's
special report, Dad stared at
the TV. “I'll be
Â
a son of a bitch,”
he said over and over.
Surprise and anger
Â
rocked him, but Mom looked
jubilant. Smiling like she'd
won a victory,
Â
she stood up, winked at
me, and went to the kitchen
to finish cleaning
Â
up while Dad sat stunned
by Cronkite's betrayal of
America. I
Â
agreed when Cronkite
said we should leave Vietnam,
“not as victors, but
Â
as honorable
people who lived up to their
promise to defend
Â
democracy, and
did the best they could.” He was
right. It was time for
Â
us to end the war.
How many had already
died? How many more
Â
would die if we kept
fighting? How much more blood would
it take to conquer
Â
a Southeast Asian
country on the other side
of the world? If the
Â
war didn't end soon,
would my own blood help pay the
price of Vietnam?
March 1968
Week Ten: 509
Â
A new girl showed up
in Mr. Ruby's class. Tall,
with straight blond hair that
Â
hung past her shouldersâ
and gorgeous without trying.
White peace signs and doves
Â
covered her tie-dyed
tee shirt, and while our teacher
signed her admit slip,
Â
she looked around the
room like she owned the place. No
shyness. No fear. Just
Â
confidence. Plenty
of confidence. When Mr.
Ruby finished, he
Â
handed her the slip
and pointed at me. “Take that
desk behind Ashe.” My
Â
heart thumped when she walked
down the row and took her seat.
I'd never seen a
Â
high school girl like her.
She looked like a goddess, a
tall, beautiful blond
Â
goddess. I wanted
to turn around and talk to
her, to look at her,
Â
but Mr. Ruby
must have read my mind. “Ashe, you'll
get to know your new