Read Death Coming Up the Hill Online
Authors: Chris Crowe
I was surprised how
Â
calm he was about
the warâand how his stories
haunted me. “It's a
Â
bad scene over there,”
he said. “Real bad.” He lit a
cigarette, took a
Â
long drag, and while smoke
drifted upward like a lost
soul, he shook his head.
July 1968
Week Twenty-Eight: 183
Â
The summer and Dad
were brutal to Mom. The sun
melted energy
Â
out of her, and she
spent afternoons, the worst part
of every July
Â
day, in the quiet
coolness of her bedroom. Most
days she was far too
Â
wiped out to attend
anti-war demonstrations
or political
Â
meetings. At night she'd
shuffle around the house with
a hand on her huge
Â
belly, as if one
false step might break her open.
Digging ditches all
Â
day wiped me out, too,
but Mom's was a different
kind of weariness.
Â
The baby inside
her made Mom suffer. And so
did Dad by dropping
Â
tons of cold legal
stuff on her as punishment
for being pregnant.
July 1968
Week Twenty-Nine: 157
Â
The summer tortured
Angela's family as much
as it tortured mine.
Â
Still no word from her
brother, and the Army did
nothing to help. She'd
Â
take turns with her mom
and dad calling bureaucrats
and writing letters,
Â
but in the end, the
military stonewall won.
The Army knew where
Â
Kelly was stationed,
but they couldn'tâor wouldn'tâ
confirm his status.
Â
When I went to the
Turners' house on Friday night,
the place felt like its
Â
spirit had been ripped
from it. Her parents welcomed
me like always, but
Â
their warm smiles couldn't
camouflage the worry etched
onto their faces,
Â
and even though we
sat at the kitchen table
eating cookies and
Â
chatting, the mood felt
forced, fake, hollow. Angela
grabbed my hand. “Let's walk.”
â
  â
  â
Smoky strands of clouds
stretched across the orange-red
western sky, and the
Â
dry heat from the baked
sidewalk warmed the soles of our
shoes as we walked to
Â
Meyer Park. Waves of
sorrow radiated from
Angela, and when
Â
our hands brushed, she clutched
mine and pulled us to a stop.
Her eyes glistened with
Â
tears, and she started
talking, fast, about Kelly,
the war, the riots
Â
and demonstrations,
the murders of Kennedy
and King. “Sometimes I
Â
feel like our world is
drowning in madness and death.”
Her eyes pleaded for
Â
comforting, wise words,
but I didn't know what to
say. We stood there in
Â
silence while the last
rays of color faded from
the horizon. Then
Â
she squeezed my hand and
we walked to the park, where we
sat on swings, sharing
Â
the weight of worry
that burdened us. We didn't
know what might still be
Â
coming up the hill
in 1968, but
we swore whatever
Â
happened, we'd face it
together. Sitting there in
the dark, our pinkie
Â
fingers linked, I thanked
God that Angela's life had
intersected mine.
July 1968
Week Thirty: 193
Â
It looked like the war
would never slow down. Reuben
laughed when I asked him
Â
about it. “Ain't no
way, man. The white-collar dudes
sitting in D.C.
Â
aren't the ones bleeding.
They have it their way, this war
will last forever,
Â
and if we run out
of Vietcong to blow up,
they'll find some other
Â
war to keep business
hopping.” I didn't want to
believe him, because
Â
I was depending
on my college deferment
to keep me safely
Â
out of the draft through
1973. There
was no way we'd still
Â
be in Vietnam
that long, so I'd graduate
from college and step
Â
into a peaceful
working world. But if we were
still at war, I'd be
Â
instant draft bait, and
that would change everything. I
didn't want to think
Â
about it, but all
afternoon, images of
jungle warfare and
Â
death haunted me. If
Reuben was right, in five years
I might be digging
Â
foxholes and dodging
bullets on the front lines of
a jungle war, and
Â
even in the heat
of the Arizona sun,
a chill shivered me.
August 1968
Week Thirty-One: 171
Â
“It's the not knowing
that's the worst. Is he rotting
in a Vietcong
Â
prison, or is he
dead?” Angela's voice trembled.
“Why don't they tell us
Â
something, Ashe? They have
to know where he is!” She got
worked up like this when
Â
all the worrying
at home dominoed onto
her. She could hold up
Â
when only her mom
freaked, but when her dad caved, too,
she couldn't handle
Â
it, and she'd call to
tell me to meet her at the
park. Last night a mean
Â
desperation gripped
her, a kind of panic-laced
determination
Â
to do something, to
fix things. When I got there, she
was pacing back and
Â
forth in front of the
swing set; as soon as she saw
me, she unloaded:
Â
the frustration and
pain, anger and sadness. I'd
heard it all before
Â
and knew the best thing
I could do was to listen.
So I sat on a
Â
swing while she paced and
talked and swore and cried. When she
finished, she turned to
Â
me and said, “I'd do
anything to save him, Ashe.
Anything. Even
Â
die.” The look on her
face told me she meant it, and
I wondered where that
Â
kind of courage and
love came from. If I were in
her shoes, would I be
Â
willingâwould I be
ableâto sacrifice my
life for a sibling?
August 1968
Week Thirty-Two: 173
Â
After school, I found
Mom whispering into the
phone in the kitchen,
Â
wiping tears from her
cheeks as she sat hunched at the
table. When she saw
Â
me, she hung up and
dabbed her eyes with a tissue.
“Was that Dad?” I asked.
Â
“A friend.” And I knew
she meant
that
guy. “Ashe, there is
something you should know
Â
about . . .” But then the
front door opened, and Dad walked
into the kitchen.
Â
Reading the surprise
on our faces, he said, “I
still own this house, you
Â
know, even if I
don't live here anymore. I
came to pick up a
Â
few things.” The shock of
seeing Dad made Mom ready
for a fight. “You could
Â
have called.” Dad stared at
her, then at me, and sighed. “I
tried,” he said, “but the
Â
line's been busy for
more than an hour.” Raw tension
smoldered between them,
Â
a standoff just like
old times, but Dad ended it
by going downstairs.
Â
Taking a deep breath,
Mom rested her head on her
hands. “This is a real
Â
rugged patch for me,
Ashe, and I'm going to need
your help to get through
Â
it.” The doorbell rang,
and before I could move, I
heard the door open
Â
and Dad's annoyed voice:
“What do
you
want?” Mom paled and
dropped her hand to her
Â
belly. Angela's
voice: “Is Ashe home?” At my front
door. With my dad. I
Â
got up so fast my
chair crashed onto the floor, but
I arrived too late.
Â
She saw me standing
behind my dad and smiled. “Hey,
Ashe.” Dad stepped back, took
Â
a long look at her,
then turned on me. “Who is this?”
Icy slivers spiked
Â
his voice, and I felt
hearts and hopes and doors slamming
shut as I fumbled
Â
for answers that would
satisfy my father and
my hippie girlfriend.
August 1968
Week Thirty-Three: 159
Â
Angela and her
mother brought dinner over
Wednesday night. When she
Â
had heard about Dad,
she insisted on doing
something to help. “Mom
Â
and I know something
about loss,” she had said. “And
it's no fun dealing
Â
with it alone.” When
they walked in, it felt like they
breathed life back into
Â
our home. Angela's
mom hugged my mother like they
were long-lost sisters,
Â
and Mom's eyes teared up
when she met Angela. “I'm
sorry about what
Â
happened the last time
you came over. Ashe's dad . . .
well, just let me say
Â
I'm sorry, but I
am delighted to meet you.”
After eating, we
Â
went downstairs to watch
the evening news, but when a
report on the war
Â
came on, I jumped up
and changed the channel to a
news program about
Â
a massive high-rise
office building project that
was getting started
Â
in New York City.
These twin office towers, said
the reporter, would
Â
be the world's tallest,
a permanent monument
to America's
Â
ingenuity,
capitalistic system,
and democracy.
Â
Mom started laughing.
“Isn't it ironic that
we're bombing the hell
Â
out of one country
while we're building monuments
to our own greatness?”
Â
The room fell silent;
I felt the awkwardness of
Mom's political
Â
statement. But seconds
later Angela's mom said,
“I hear you, sister.”
August 1968
Week Thirty-Four: 308
Â
The attention from
Mrs. Turner really helped
my mom get through some
Â
rough days, but still I
worried. Sometimes after work,
I'd find Mom in her
Â
bedroom, panting and
moaning and dripping with sweat.
I'd never felt so
Â
weak and desperate.
If Mom went into labor
at home, what would I
Â
do? What could I do?
Call an ambulance and hope
it would get her to
Â
the hospital in
time? What if something went wrong?
Complicationsâor
Â
worse? If I lost my
mom, the baby, or both, what
would become of me?
August 1968
Week Thirty-Five: 408
Â
Pounding dirt in the
pounding Arizona sun
darkened my skin and
Â
hardened my body,
and Reuben Ortega made
me appreciate
Â
the broiling heat. “You
think this is tough,” he said, “try
a couple days in
Â
a muddy foxhole
with mortar shells dropping all
around you day and
Â
nightӉhe'd stare into
the distance and his voice would
get raggedâ“never
Â
knowing if shrapnel
or a sniper will nail you
while you're sweating in
Â
a stinking hellhole,
just hoping to make it through
the night.” Then he'd snap
Â
out of it, focus
his eyes on me, and say, “Don't
never go to war.
Â
If it don't kill you,
it'll break you, and you'll be