Authors: Artis Henderson
The next morning we were
both up early. I lay in bed while Miles showered and talked to him as he moved through the room. He dressed in his uniform and laced up his boots. Outside, the damp heat of July was already building and pressing against the sides of the trailer. I wished that a breeze might sweep down and blow the cornstalks in the fields, that a wind might stir the leaves and send up clouds of black dirt. But the air remained without moving, saturated and suffocating, hard to breathe.
I showered and dressed in time to hear Miles's parents pull into the driveway. The four of us hugged, spoke some, then stood in the front yard to snap photos. The ground was uneven and the roots of the old oaks rose up and fell back under the soil in waves. We balanced the camera on the back of Miles's truck so we could take a picture of the four of us together. When we finished, Miles and I climbed into his pickup. He cranked the engine and we rumbled up the driveway, rolling over the knobby roots, driving past the corn standing stiff in the fields. Miles stuck a hand out his window and his parents raised theirs in return.
At the hangar on base, Miles dropped off his tough bins and loaded his rucksack while I leaned against the truck. People from the unit milled around the parking lot and I watched the wives whose husbands had been on previous deployments. They had learned to be still and wait. I saw Crystal across the parking lot and waved.
“How's it going?” she said when she came over.
I shrugged and we stood beside each other for a long minute without talking. Across the parking lot Troy called out to her.
“I better go,” she said. “I'll come find you when the buses leave.”
Miles came back to the truck and I followed him into the hangar. The helicopters were already gone, sent on a boat halfway across the world. Miles and I sat facing each other on the cool concrete and I tried not to watch the other families. I saw the men hold small children and touch the shoulders of their wives beside them. They sat in tight groups, wagons circled against the night. Miles and I formed our own circle. He ran his fingers along my arm in a way that made me shiver and I rested my hand on his knee. We hardly spoke.
When the buses rolled up outside, Miles stood and I stood with him. We made our way back into the parking lot. I wrapped my arms around his neck and felt his body beneath my hands, the muscles of his back, the hardness in his shoulders, and realized this would be the last time I would touch him for a long while. Fear filled me then, hot and raw, and swept through my body, leaving me shaken and hollowed. Miles held me close before he turned and stepped onto the bus. He took a seat near the back beside a window while I waited on the ground outside. Crystal stood to my right. With the men gone, the wives had regrouped. Miles waved to me from his seat and I waved back, waved the entire time the bus rumbled away. When it had disappeared around the corner I thought to myself,
Not all of them will come home.
I hoped it would not be anyone I knew.
In the month after the
unit deployed, buyers everywhere paid too much for property they couldn't afford. Police arrested Mel Gibson in California and readers cried over
Marley & Me
. An article in the
Atlantic
discussed the possible pullout of troops from Iraq and the death toll reached more than two thousand. I did not hear from Miles for more than two weeks, and then one afternoon my phone rang with a number I did not recognize. My mother was driving us down Daniels Parkway, a strip of
land that once was scrub brush and palmetto hammocks but like most of south Florida had given over to strip malls and subdivisions.
“Hello?” I said.
“Hello, babe?”
“Oh, my God.”
My mother looked at me, at the road, back at me, and she was already slowing down and putting on her blinker. She turned into a new housing complex, past the ornamental landscaping at the entrance, and put the car in park. I pointed to the phone and mouthed
I'm sorry
but she shook her head and waved me out of the car.
Go.
“How are you?” I asked Miles as I opened the door.
“Doing all right,” he said.
I sat on the smooth lip of the concrete curb and watched waves of heat roll off the asphalt. There were plumbago bushes at my back, their tiny purple flowers vibrant, and red blossoms on the ixora plant. Round-bottomed clouds billowed across the blue sky.
“How was your trip over?” I said. “Did everything go okay?”
“Everything was smooth. No problems getting here.”
“And now you're there? In Iraq?”
“We're here.”
“Where are you staying?”
“They have us in barracks. Two to a room.”
“Who are you rooming with?”
“Troy.”
I laughed. “No kidding.”
“Chow's pretty good.”
“What are they feeding you?”
“The normal stuff. We had pecan pie the other night.”
“Not bad,” I said. “How's the weather?”
“Pretty hot. But listen, babe, tell me about things there. How are you doing?”
“Me?” I said. “I'm fine. Missing you.”
“I miss you too.”
The phone line lagged and we were both quiet, waiting for the other person to speak.
“Did youâ”
“How areâ”
We laughed and the phone went silent again.
“You talk,” Miles said. “I want to hear what's going on with you. How are things going with your mom?”
I glanced at the car, where my mother flipped through a newspaper. It was ninety-five degrees and she had the engine off but kept the windows rolled up to give me space.
“Great,” I said. “We're doing great. It's been surprisingly easy to be back home.”
“Good, good.”
A line of ants marched out of the cracks in the pavement and into the recently laid mulch. One crawled over my painted toenails and tickled the skin there. The traffic on Daniels hummed past and I pressed my ear to the phone. If I closed my eyes and shallowed my breath so that the damp air didn't come too close, if I ignored the fragrance from the narrow-throated flowers at my back and the acrid pinch of the tar in the pavementâif I focused just on the phone in my hand, not on the road, not on the plants, not on the thunderheads gathering in the east, just the phoneâit was almost as if Miles and I were together.
The phone line stuttered and cracked.
“Miles?”
“I'm here but I have to go.”
“Already?”
“My time's up.”
“I love you,” I said.
“I love you too.”
“Be safe.”
“I will.”
A car pulled into the subdivision and turned into the loop where my mother had parked. She waved the driver around but he honked his horn and she had to put the car in gear and pull forward. She gave him the finger as he drove past. The fronds of the cabbage palm behind me hung limp and a gnat hovered close to my face. I held the receiver for a full minute before realizing the line was dead in my hand.
Not long afterward I applied
for a PR position at a research farm north of town. It was a good job, with decent pay and nice people. I'd handle the tours of the property, scheduling the groups of students and international aid workers who came to examine the tropical agriculture grown on the farm. The place had chaya and Moringa and jicama, pomelos twice the size of grapefruits, and a staff that had traveled the world. My office would have a window that looked out on a pond stocked with tilapia, and in the high season I could take home bags of mangoes and avocados. They told me I could even drive the golf cart.
Another month passed. The Dow Jones hit stratospheric levels; it turned out war was good for business. The housing boom started to look like it might go on forever. I got the job. Miles called to tell me, laughing breathlessly into the phone, about a jog he had taken around base.
“I wanted to get in a quick run before we went to the chow hall,” he said, “and everything started out all right. But then as I was coming in for the last leg, I saw this other guy running ahead of me.”
I could hear him smiling across the ocean between us.
“He looked back over his shoulder at me and stepped up his pace.
By now he's sprinting. He looked back again with this scared look in his eyes and I'm thinking,
I'm going to nail this guy.
”
I laughed into the phone.
“So we ran like that for another twenty yards and I started closing in. The guy looked back two more times and every time he had this worried expression.”
Miles laughed to himself on the other end of the line.
“By now people were gathered at the barracks watching us come in,” he said. “It was like
Chariots of Fire.
I put on an extra burst of speed and
bam!
I surged past him at the finish. Everybody's high-fiving me and slapping me on the back. Then I turn around to shake this guy's hand and I stopped.”
His voice dropped to a whisper.
“It was like nothing I've ever seen. A wall of sand.”
A sandstorm had come up during the last leg of the race and the men from the unit had come outside to see the squall move in. They saw Miles and the other runner heading to camp at a breakneck pace.
“I thought they were all out there to see me,” Miles said, and I could hear him shake his head. “But they thought I was running for my life.”
The soldiers had a few seconds of openmouthed wonder before the fury of the storm overtook the camp, obliterating the sun and pushing red dust into every crevice. Miles and his crew hustled inside as the first abrasive blast shook their hovel.
“It was great,” he said to me over the phone. “I outran a sandstorm.”
When we couldn't speak on
the phone, we talked in letters. I told him about leading tours, managing docents, and growing food in the tropics. I sent him photos of me behind the wheel of a golf cart. He wrote back:
Everything is going alright over here. We had some rockets shot into the airfield the other day, but they were so far away we could not even hear them. I am so excited that power bars and pumpkin pie are being served in the chow hall now. I have already gathered tons of snacks for my room. I bet I have already stored up fifteen power bars, two travel bowls of cereal, and one package of oatmeal raisin cookies. If we come under siege, I want to be ready. Not much real news to talk about. Nothing new, anyway. I guess that is a good thing. Just the same old crap as always, continuous commo problems, trouble getting parts, mission planning, and of course flying is keeping everyone busy.
I sent packages once a week. I figured out how to make a video of myselfâsitting on my bed, monologuing for five minutesâand burned the short clip to a CD that I mailed with a bad batch of cookies. I wrote:
Just a quick note to tell you how very much I love you and miss you. You are the light of my life; if I were a redneck town, you would be my Gun and Knife show. You are my free t-shirt thrown into the crowd. Enjoy the goodies. The cookies are terrible. The first batch, the few crackly ones on top, are good, but the rest are terrible. I threw some of them away, but I wanted you to know I baked for you, so I just wrapped them up and sent them anyway. My mom actually suggested I stopped baking, and said she'd throw in $5 so I could buy cookies. We got down a world map today and looked at Korea. I think there are great possibilities for adventures if you are assigned there next.
He wrote back:
I received an awesome package in the mail today that included a most wonderful video message. How did you do it? I would love to
send you one. By the way, I tried the ginger snaps on both the top and bottom of the bag and I thought they all tasted very, very good.
From his letters it was hard to tell he was fighting a war. But I often wondered what he did during his missions over the desert cities. And afterward? Did he count his kills like scalps after an Indian raid? Did he weep softly in his bunk at night?
In early October, his letters
began to change:
Today was kind of rough. All of us are doing just fine, but today was long and rough. Please remember us in your prayers, babe. Especially remember the ground guys. Remember them, babe. I love you and can hardly wait to be home with you again.
And in another:
We made it through one more flight here. I hate night flights, and I always will.
During Saturday brunch at Annabelle's
house, French toast sat on the table next to strawberries in a bowl and a casserole dish with grits and cheese and bacon. Annabelle stood at the kitchen counter juicing oranges while I worried the pulp might get stuck in her engagement
ring. Stacy wore an engagement ring too. We were like that, all of us getting engaged at the same time, our weddings just six months apart.
Heather sat across the table from me and fished a strawberry out of the bowl.
“You guys are lucky to have bought this place before the prices got crazy,” she said to Annabelle. “It has to be worth twice what you paid for it.”
Annabelle sliced an orange on the cutting board. “We got a good deal.”
She carried two glasses of juice to the table, took a seat at the head, and passed plates down the line. Stacy leaned forward and propped her elbows on the table.
“Everybody says real estate is a good investment right now.”
“People keep telling me property values will never go down,” I said.
I speared a slice of French toast with my fork and lifted it onto my plate. Across the table, Heather twisted the cap off a bottle of maple syrup and doused her plate.
“Are you and Miles going to buy a house in North Carolina when he gets back?” she said.
“I wish we could buy a place down here.”
“Down here?” Heather said.
They stopped eating and looked at me.