Read Death Coming Up the Hill Online
Authors: Chris Crowe
to Sadie Hawkins
Â
with you Saturday
night. I'm gonna need you to
cheer me up, okay?”
â
  â
  â
When Angela picked
me up that night, Mom was gone
and Dad was watching
Â
Lawrence Welk. He just
waved at me when I told him
I was going out
Â
with some friends. Before
we even got to her car,
Angela stopped, threw
Â
her long arms around
me, and planted a wet kiss
right on my mouth. We
Â
stood in the shadows
of my garage, holding and
kissing like I was
Â
going off to war
the next morning. Then she sighed.
“I needed that, Ashe.
Â
God knows, I really
needed that.” She felt soft and
strong and smelled faintly
Â
of cinnamon. I
struggled to steady my voiceâ
“Happy to oblige”â
Â
and kissed her again.
We finally drove to the
dance but never left
Â
her car. Instead of
dancing, we talked and talked, not
about Vietnam,
Â
civil rights, riots,
or anything else but us:
Angela and Ashe.
April 1968
Week Seventeen: 302
Â
After our Sadie's
date, Angela wanted to
meet my family,
Â
but that was the last
thing I wanted. My home life
couldn't take any
Â
more drama. I told
her that my parents were on
the brink of divorce,
Â
so a meet-up was
not a good idea. “But my
mom would love you,” I
Â
said, and left it at
that. But Angela's too smart
for that. “What about
Â
your dad?” She smiled. “Would
he love me, too?” Trying to
avoid her eyes, I
Â
shrugged and said, “Well, Dad's
complicated,” and changed the
subject. How could I
Â
explain my dad's old-
fashioned attitudes about
war? I didn't want
Â
to risk losing my
girlfriend and my family
both at the same time.
â
  â
  â
At home, raw tension
entangled our lives. Mom's and
Dad's orbits rarely
Â
intersected, and
when they did, they passed in a
silence as cold as
Â
outer space. Most nights,
Dad worked late, Mom attended
protest rallies, and
Â
I'd eat alone, do
my homework, and go to bed
without seeing them.
Â
Sometimes I'd lie in
bed, wondering if things could
have been different.
â
  â
  â
I came home from school
one day and found my mom in
the kitchen, crying
Â
into the phone. Tears
streaked her red cheeks, and when she
saw me, she wiped her
Â
eyes, turned her back to
me, said, “Gotta go,” and hung
up, looking guilty.
Â
I knew she didn't
want to talk about why she
was crying. It was
Â
probably about
Dad, a rally, or something
heavy. I had planned
Â
to tell her about
Angela, but she didn't
need anything else
Â
to worry about,
so I headed upstairs to
tune out. Something was
Â
going on with her,
and I didn't like the tell-
tale signs. She'd shift from
Â
being mellow to
being emotional, and
then ravenously
Â
hungry. Could it be
marijuana? She could buy
it at those rallies
Â
or anywhere on
campus. It was hard to think
my mom had become
Â
a pothead, but who
could blame her? Maybe getting
high helped her deal with
Â
her failed marriage and
all the crap going on in
the world around her.
May 1968
Week Eighteen: 383
Â
Angela and I
had our first “disagreement”
over a movie.
Â
She wanted to see
Guess Who's Coming to Dinner,
but I wanted to
Â
see
Bonnie and Clyde,
and as we argued about
it, I felt myself
Â
acting like my dad.
I stopped. Arguing. Talking.
Looking, listening,
Â
that was better, way
better, and the longer I
looked at her, the less
Â
I cared about what
movie we went to. I just
wanted to be with
Â
her. Standing outside
the theater, watching the
soft curve of her lips
Â
and the light from the
marquee glittering in her
chocolate brown eyes,
Â
I wondered when Dad
stopped feeling this way about
Mom. When did they start
Â
to care more about
ideas than each other? I
took Angela's hand,
Â
pulled her to the box
office, and bought two tickets
to
Guess Who's Coming
Â
to Dinner.
Even
if I had known in advance
that she was going
Â
to cry through the whole
movie, I wouldn't have changed
anything that night.
May 1968
Week Nineteen: 562
Â
Angela's parents
welcomed me into their home,
and their kindness stirred
Â
a rush of envy
in me. They appeared to be
everything I'd hoped
Â
my own family
could have been. Mr. Turner,
a political
Â
science professor
at ASU, shook my hand
like we were old friends.
Â
“Angela's told us
a lot about you, so we're
glad to finally
Â
meet the famous Ashe
Douglas.” We sat around their
kitchen table and
Â
talked and laughed and ate
peanut butter cookies and
filled the room with a
Â
warmth I'd never known.
But I wrecked it all when I
asked about their son.
Â
“Kelly?” Angela's
mother faded like someone
had punched her off switch.
Â
“He . . .” A panicked look
to her husband, and he slid
his hand over hers,
Â
patting it gently
while he told me they hadn't
heard anything from
Â
Kelly, Angela's
older brother, for a while.
“Army mail isn't
Â
very efficient,
especially coming out
of Vietnam, and
Â
our son's never been
much of a letter writer,
but still, we worry.
Â
When you've got a boy
at war, it's tough not knowing
if he's okay or
Â
not.” Angela nudged
me with her foot and nodded
at the door. “I'm sure
Â
he's fine,” she said. “But
he should know we need to hear
from him more often.”
â
  â
  â
Angela walked me
outside and told me how her
brother's silence had
Â
tied her family
up in knots. “Dad handles it,
but it's killing my
Â
mother. She can't stop
worrying about him, if
he's deadâor worse.” When
Â
I wondered what was
worse than dead, Angela said,
“Missing in action.”
May 1968
Week Twenty: 549
Â
Seventeen is my
favorite prime number, and
not because I'm a
Â
number nerd. Dad wore
seventeen in college, just
like Dizzy Dean, his
Â
old baseball hero.
I wore it too, of course, but
it wasn't just sports
Â
that made me like it.
When I was young, Mom really
loved a Beatles song
Â
that had the line, “Well,
she was just seventeen, you
know what I mean . . . ,” and
Â
I thought it was cool
to hear a song based on my
birthday, and then I
Â
started noticing
seventeens everywhere, and
it made me feel like
Â
I belonged to a
secret club. The Celtics' John
Havlicek wears my
Â
number, and it's the
number of syllables in
a haiku poem,
Â
and it's the day in
May when
Brown versus Board of
Education
was
Â
announced, and it's the
age you can give blood, join the
military, and
Â
get married, and it's
the name of a magazine
for girls, and it's the
Â
number of years a
weird kind of cicada lives
underground before
Â
coming out to mate,
and it's the day I was born,
and for years I'd been
Â
looking forward to
turning seventeen on May
seventeenth. I can't
Â
say for sure what I
expected to happen the
day when my birthday
Â
stars all aligned, but
I figured something special
would take place, something
Â
I'd never forget.
In a way, I felt like that
cicada, and I
Â
was ready to dig
out from underground and get
on with adult life.
â
  â
  â
But my birthday got
off to a lousy start when
I heard on the news
Â
that the past two weeks
were the bloodiest ever.
More than one thousand
Â
Americans died
in Vietnam in those two
weeks, and Angela's
Â
family still had
no word from Kelly, and Mom
was in bed acting
Â
sick the whole time. How
could I celebrate when so
much was going wrong?
May 1968
Week Twenty-One: 426
Â
When you start to love
someone like Angela, you
learn how to talk and
Â
how to listen, and
you start talking about things
you've never before
Â
dared to say out loudâ
all kinds of things: dreams, goals, and
fears. Angela planned
Â
to change the world by
joining the Peace Corps and then
teaching grade school kids.
Â
“If we want to change
things,” she said, “that's where we've got
to start.” I loved her
Â
confidence, her faith
in the future, and I wished
that I had some of
Â
her rock-solid self-
assurance. I thought a girl
like her feared nothing,
Â
but I was wrong. She
was worried about what might
happen if Kelly
Â
turned out to be a
POW or, worse,
missing in action.
Â
“I don't know if Mom
could take it.” Her voice soft now,
edged with dread. “I don't
Â
know if
I
could take
it.” She sighed, and a heavy
silence filled the air
Â
between us before
she spoke again. “And sometimes
I'm afraid, just plain
Â
afraid of all the
craziness in the world right
now. There's so much I
Â
want to do, Ashe, but
what if something happens that
blows up all my dreams?”
Â
The ache in her voice
surprised me, and I didn't
know what to say, but
Â
I knew that if I
had to, I'd gladly dive on
a grenade for her.
â
  â
  â
Angela knew that
I was afraid of getting
drafted and sent to
Â
Vietnam. She knew
it wasn't politics that
made me oppose the
Â
war, it was plain old
fear. I can't explain it; I
was as loyal as
Â
the next guy, but the
thought of battle turned my spine
to ice. I didn't
Â
want to die, but I
also worried that in a
life-and-death battle,
Â
my hesitation,
my fear might cause someone else
to die. With bullets
Â
flying and mortar
shells exploding all around,
would I have the guts
Â
to sacrifice my
life to save my buddies? If
a live grenade rolled
Â
into camp, it would
kill me if I covered it
or if I didn't.
Â
In my heart I knew
that if I went to war, I
wouldn't make it backâ
Â
or if I did make