Fort Benning Blues

Fort Benning Blues

by Mark Busby
Fort Benning Blues

Fort Benning Blues

by Mark Busby

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Overview

If you've never even been to Southeast Asia, can you be a Vietnam veteran? In a novel that captures the life and times of a generation, Mark Busby takes us on a journey through an era of hippies, the shootings at Kent State University, integration, and Woodstock. Fort Benning Blues tells the story of Vietnam from this side of the ocean.

Drafted in 1969, Jeff Adams faces a war he doesn't understand. While trying to delay the inevitable tour of duty in Vietnam, Adams attends Officer Candidate School in Fort Benning, Georgia, desperately hoping Nixon will achieve “peace with honor” before he graduates. The Army's job is to weed out the “duds,” “turkeys,” and “dummies” in an effort to keep not only the officers but also the men under their command alive in the rice paddies of Vietnam. It doesn't take long for the stress to create casualties.

Lieutenant Rancek, Adams' training officer at OCS, is ready to cut candidates from the program for any perceived weakness. He does this, not for the Army, but because he wants only the best “. . . leading the platoon on my right” when he goes to Vietnam.

Hugh Budwell, one of Adams' roommates, brings the laid-back spirit of California with him to Fort Benning. Tired of practicing estate law, he joins the Army to relieve the boredom he feels pervades his life. About Officer Candidate School, Budwell states, “If I wanted to go through it without any trouble, I'd be wondering about myself.”

Candidate Patrick “Sheriff” Garrett, a black southerner, spends a night with Adams in the low-crawl pit after they both raise Rancek's ire. Expecting racism when he joined the Army, Garrett copes better than most with the rigors of Officer Candidate School.

Busby uses song lyrics, newspaper headlines, and the jargon of the era to bring the sixties and seventies alive again. Henry Kissinger is described as “Peter Sellers as Dr. Strangelove” and Lieutenant William “Rusty” Calley as “Howdy Doody in uniform.” Of My Lai, Busby says, “At Fort Benning everybody took those actions as a matter of course.”

As America continues to try to comprehend the effects of one of the most transforming eras in our history, Fort Benning Blues adds another perspective to the meaning of being a Vietnam veteran.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780875655406
Publisher: TCU Press
Publication date: 05/31/2013
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 206
File size: 2 MB

About the Author

Mark Busby is an English professor and Director of the Center for the Study of the Southwest at Texas State University–San Marcos. He is the author of books on Larry McMurtry, Ralph Ellison, Lanford Wilson, and Preston Jones and has edited several books, anthologies and journal articles about the Southwest and its writers. His stories can be found in New Texas Short Stories and Texas Short Stories II. Busby is currently secretary-treasurer of the Texas Institute of Letters and editor of Southwest Literary Review and Texas Books in Review. He completed OCS at Fort Benning in 1970.

Read an Excerpt

Fort Benning Blues

A Novel


By Mark Busby

TCU Press

Copyright © 2001 Mark Busby
All rights reserved.
ISBN: 978-0-87565-540-6



CHAPTER 1

Arrival


"Ask not what your country can do for you. Ask what you can do for your country." —John F. Kennedy


Sitting quietly looking out the window, I vaguely heard the pilot announce that we would be arriving in Columbus in fifteen minutes. It was a beautiful morning for flying—the sky was clear at our altitude; below I could see the clouds looking like cotton neatly arranged in a surgeon's tray. Occasionally there was a break, and the tops of the green pine trees and red, sandy roads showed clearly.

The GI beside me woke and stretched.

"You headed for Benning, kid?" the NCO asked.

"Yes," I replied.

I looked at the sergeant and noticed that he was young, probably not much over twenty, small and slim with a wispy, premature mustache. On his chest were two rows of ribbons, but the only one I recognized was the Purple Heart. He was probably two or three years younger than me, but since he was a buck sergeant and had been to Nam, he could call me "kid."

"What are you going to do at Benning?" the sergeant asked.

"I'm supposed to go to Officer Candidate School. You?"

"I just got back from Nam, and I'm going to check in with my new unit before I go on leave."

"Your new unit?"

"I'm going to be an instructor in Jump School. You goin' airborne?"

"No, I don't think so. I've got to get through OCS first."

"Yeah and that's a bitch I've heard, but so's jump school."

At that moment the pilot announced that it was time to fasten seat belts, so we both did and became quiet. Again I looked out the circular window and watched the plane descend through the cloud cover. As we came through the mist, I felt as though I were passing through some kind of mystical barrier in a science-fiction movie, and for some reason I had the urge to bend down in my seat, draw my knees up, and put my head between them. I felt the plane's wheels touch down, causing a momentary rush of fear and excitement until the reassuring sound of the wheels rolling solidly on the asphalt caused me to sigh and relax.

I had been drafted in January '69, right after I'd graduated from college and just as Nixon was inaugurated, and although I didn't have much faith in Nixon's campaign promise of a secret plan to end the war in Vietnam, I thought the country's mood would change within a year or revolution would thunder in the streets. So after I was drafted, I learned that I could volunteer for Officer Candidate School and delay my entry into the Army for four months. Given the four months for Basic and Advanced Individual Training and the six months of OCS, I could bide my time for months. Long before my time was up, I expected the fighting would be over.

I had decided not to go to Canada, not so much because I was afraid of losing my country but mainly because of my grandfather, the first Jefferson Bowie Adams, the man for whom I had been named. Granddad was a veteran of World War I and worked on the railroad before he settled down on his ranch in Mariposa, Texas, to raise a few Herefords and a lot of hell with his neighbors. He was a curious combination of southwestern independence and patriotism, spoke with pride about his military days. He had joined the cavalry before the war broke out, and he would bring out his pictures of himself in uniform riding his favorite mount, Chief Bowles, named for the leader of the Cherokees in East Texas. Then he would tell war stories about the Argonne Forest and Belleau Wood. They still called them cavalry units then, even though horses weren't effective in war by then and were mainly ceremonial. So it was for Granddad that I, Jefferson Bowie Adams, II, had decided to go to OCS, knowing that if Granddad's namesake hightailed it for Canada, his disgrace would be too great a burden for him to carry and for me to live with.

I also wasn't sure what to think about the war in Vietnam. I had been raised to believe in my country and its leaders. I had read about military heroes and had seen Audie Murphy, a slight orphan boy from Texas, in To Hell and Back at least five times as a kid in the 1950s. There was something of a fascination with the belief that each generation had a war in which the boys became men. I had been brought up to believe that Americans had a God-given right to lead the world and that American leaders sought truth and justice against the forces of darkness, in this case the Communists working through the Vietnamese. And I had also learned to believe as I grew up that the little peoples of the world needed our help in learning to walk the straight and narrow.

Now in November 1969 I was on my way to Infantry OCS while the war continued like a bad movie. The end of the runway approached, and the plane taxied toward the terminal. When we were stopped, the sergeant stood up, got his gear from above the seat, turned to me, and remarked: "Good luck, kid. If you make it through, I'll salute you and call you 'sir' one of these days."

"Thanks, if I make it through."

In the terminal I learned I had an hour to kill before the taxis could take me out to the base, so I began to look around for coffee. I moved out through the passenger waiting area and saw a small room where several servicemen sat. I took a cup of coffee from a pretty, round-faced, dark-haired girl wearing a striped outfit and tried to hand her a dime.

"Oh, no," she protested, "compliments of the USO. We still take care of the boys."

"Thanks," I replied and walked to a corner table, careful not to spill my coffee. I took a drink and let the liquid flow slowly into my stomach, warming me and pricking my mind alert as I thought about six months of OCS. I had heard many rumors about jumping off the truck and being forced to low-crawl across the cement dragging my duffel bag, but I knew that an army travels on its rumors, so I wasn't worried. Nor was I really anxious about the physical requirements. But I was concerned about my decision to carry out an act that required me to do something I wasn't sure about.

The Columbus, Georgia, airport looked like the kind of airport you would expect in an army town. It was small, with telephones lining the walls. Wherever there wasn't a telephone, there was a pinball machine, one of the many money-takers aimed at getting a quarter from a guy who wants to forget where he is. GIs were everywhere—hunched over the machines, talking passionately into the phones, sprawled wherever there was enough room for a man to get. It was another big day at the airport.

At an information booth I found a Columbus Chamber of Commerce brochure that told me a little about the region. Columbus stands at the central western border of Georgia on the Chattahoochee River between Georgia and Alabama. It's in the lower Piedmont region, higher than the Coastal Plains. Fort Benning is six miles southeast, with 182,000 acres of river valley terraces and rolling terrain.

I found my duffel bag, slung it over my shoulder, and walked out to a row of old taxis. I stopped at an old, dark Plymouth squatting like a scarab under a tree and looked in at the driver, an old man smoking a cigarette and reading the paper.

"Can you give me a ride to Fort Benning?" I asked.

"Sure, for two bucks," the old man responded.

"All right."

"Get in. Put your bag there in the back."

I put my bag in and got in beside it. The old man turned the starter and the old Plymouth protested but finally started. As we turned out onto a road named Victory Drive, I looked at the driver. He had lost an ear. A dirty white patch covered the side of his head where his ear should have been.

"What part of the fort you goin' to?" the driver asked.

"I don't know. My orders say to report to 58th Officer Candidate Company. You know where that is?"

"Yeah, I know where it is. I've taken pleny a you suckers out there. Taken pleny back too. You in for a rough time, boy. 'Specially this time a year. It's gonna git cold out there this winter, and it's gonna be damned hot after it gits cold. The weather mixed with the bullshit is hard for a man to take."

"I've heard about it," I replied, "but I guess I can make it. There are lots of things in this world that folks learn to take."

"You damned right there are. Look at this goddamned ear or look at what ain't this goddamned ear."

"I noticed. You lose that in the war?"

"Hell no. That's what so bad about it. It woulda been a lot more honorable if I had. Cancer got my ear. Creeped up on me without me really being aware of it. But I learned to live with it. I just put me a clean patch on it every day or so. I can hear all right, too.

"Yeah, I wisht I had lost it in the war. I was in the war. Dubya Dubya Two. We fought, and we had some grand times. Not like now. You punks got a hard time. I don't envy you none. This Vetnam thing is shit, I tell you."

We arrived at the MP's stand that signaled the entrance to the post. After the old man slowed to a stop, a young MP walked over.

"Hiya doin' today, Mr. Phillips? Everything OK?"

"Everything's fine. Got another live one for OCS."

"Good. They're always looking for fresh meat."

"Much obliged. Take care now, you hear."

The one-eared old man ground the Plymouth into low gear, and the car lurched forward.

"They used to not stop us," he explained, "but there's been a lot of racket around the country about radicals bombing army posts in protest over the war. Now they check us pretty careful."

We drove past a group of soldiers with their faces covered with camouflage paint.

"That's a group headed for one of them make-believe war games," he said. "Goop themselves up, and go out in the forests shootin' blanks, makin' noise, and blowin' smoke."

We passed a neatly landscaped parade ground, and I saw several tanks and artillery pieces. Beyond the idle machines rows of men walked on line like automatons bending and picking up debris and cigarette butts, the continual mindless activity of military training.

"Up here I'm going to show you where you'll spend a lot of time. That big cream-colored building there is Infantry Hall, and it's one of the nicest teaching buildings in the country."

We slowed and rounded one corner of the immense building.

"Out there in front you can see that statue. It's supposed to be the spirit of the infantryman."

I looked at the statue of a huge soldier standing with his rifle raised high into the air as if he were gesturing "follow me," his mouth open in what was supposed to be a yell. It looked more like a grimace.

The old man stopped his taxi near the statue.

"Why don't you go up there and take a look? That's what they say you're here for."

I got out and walked up to the statue where in large letters was carved, "I am the Infantry. Follow Me." On the other side were the words of a song or a poem:

"I Am The Infantry"

I am the Infantry—Queen of Battle! For two centuries I have kept our Nation safe, Purchasing freedom with my blood. To tyrants, I am the day of reckoning; to the suppressed, the hope for the future. Where the fighting is thick, there am I ... I am the Infantry! FOLLOW ME!

I was therefrom the beginning, meeting the enemy face to face, will to will. My bleeding feet stained the snow at Valley Forge; my frozen hands pulled Washington across the Delaware. At Yorktown, the sunlight glinted from the sword and I, begrimed ... Saw a Nation born.

Hardship ... And glory I have known. At New Orleans, I fought beyond the hostile hour, showed the fury of my long rifle ... and came of age. I am the Infantry! FOLLOW ME!

Westward I pushed with wagon trains ... moved an empire across the plains ... extended freedom's borders and tamed the wild frontier. I am the Infantry! FOLLOW ME!

I was with Scott at Vera Cruz ... hunted the guerrilla in the mountain passes ... and scaled the high plateau. The fighting was done when I ended my march many miles from the old Alamo. From Bull Run to Appomattox, I fought and bled. Both Blue and Gray were my colors then. Two masters I served and united them strong ... proved that this nation could right a wrong ... and long endure. I am the Infantry! FOLLOW ME!

I led the charge up San Juan Hill ... scaled the walls of old Tientsin ... and stalked the Moro in the steaming jungle still ... always the vanguard, I am the Infantry!

At Chateau-Thierry, first over the top, then I stood like a rock on the Marne. It was I who cracked the Hindenburg Line...... in the Argonne, I broke the Kaiser's spine ... and didn't come back 'till it was "over, over there." I am the Infantry! FOLLOW ME!

A generation older at Bataan, I briefly bowed, but then I vowed to return. Assaulted the African shore ... learned my lesson the hard way in the desert sands ... pressed my buttons into the beach at Anzio ... and bounced into Rome with determination and resolve. I am the Infantry!

The English channel, stout beach defenses and the hedgerows could not hold me ... I broke out at St. Lo, unbent the Bulge ... vaulted the Rhine ... and swarmed the Heartland. Hitler's dream and the Third Reich were dead.

In the Pacific, from island to island ... hit the beaches and chopped through swamp and jungle ... I set the Rising Sun. I am the Infantry!

In Korea, I gathered my strength around Pusan ... swept across the frozen Han ... outflanked the Reds at Inchon ... and marched to the Yalu. FOLLOW ME!

In Vietnam, while others turned aside, I fought from the Central Highlands to the South China Sea. I patrolled the jungle, the paddies and the sky in the bitter test that belongs to the Infantry. FOLLOW ME!

My bayonet ... on the wings of power ... keeps the peace worldwide. And despots, falsely garbed in freedom's mantle, falter ... hide. My ally in the paddies and the forest ... I teach, I aid, I lead. FOLLOW ME!

Where brave men fight ... there fight I. In freedom's cause ... I live, I die. From Concord Bridge to Heartbreak Ridge, from the Arctic to the Mekong, to the Caribbean ... the Queen of Battle! Always ready ... then, now, and forever.

I am the Infantry! FOLLOW ME!


I walked back to the taxi.

"They seem to put a great deal of money into all of the trappings here."

"You bet, "the old man responded. "They got to let you know how much they think of themselves. There's a lot of showmanship in the Army. But I don't care. If it wasn't for the Army this town would die like a flower with no roots. We're glad to have 'em."

I got back in and we drove on, past the other end of the enormous building, where I saw a large field with three towers.

"What's that over there?" I asked.

"That's something else you'll get used to here. Those three towers are for paratrooper training, but you won't use them unless you go airborne. That track there that circles those towers, though, you'll get to know real good. You'll be runnin' around it 'bout every morning."

I looked at the asphalt track and guessed it to be a mile and a half to two miles long. That wouldn't be too bad, I thought. But I was still afraid of the running.

"Well here we are," the old man said.

There were rows of buildings that looked like college dormitories, all in the same cream-colored brick as Infantry Hall. Each building was neatly landscaped with straight rows of rocks lining the sidewalks. Despite the general similarity, each building was distinguished by some decoration with the company's number on it. In front of the building with 58th Company was a line of men standing beside their duffel bags.

When Phillips got my bag out of the car, I handed him two dollars and thanked him for the ride and the information.

"Good luck, son. You'll need it."

Shouldering my duffel bag, I walked up to the line of men where a slight soldier with a skinhead haircut stood about as if he were in charge.

"You here for OCS?" the soldier asked.

"That's right. Where do I go from here?"

"Stand over there in line with the others, keep your mouth shut, and no smoking. We'll call you when we want you."

I wondered who the little guy was since there was no name tag on his fatigues, and he also had brass on his collar that said "OCS."


(Continues...)

Excerpted from Fort Benning Blues by Mark Busby. Copyright © 2001 Mark Busby. Excerpted by permission of TCU Press.
All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site.

Table of Contents

Contents

At the End of Our Time: A Prologue,
One: Arrival,
Two: Welcome,
Three: Learning,
Four: Garrett,
Five: Training,
Six: Low Crawl,
Seven: Birthday Boy,
Eight: Thanksgiving,
Nine: Candy Raid,
Ten: The Spirit of the Bayonet,
Eleven: Leaving on a Jet Plane,
Twelve: CQ,
Thirteen: Gen Con,
Fourteen: Eighth Week Panel,
Fifteen: New Roomie,
Sixteen: Night Bivouac,
Seventeen: Turning Black,
Eighteen: The Silver Slipper,
Nineteen: Driving Rusty,
Twenty: Losing Rancek,
Twenty-one: Getting Kochs,
Twenty-two: Turning Blue,
Twenty-three: Ranger Week,
Twenty-four: Kent State,
Epilogue,
Acknowledgements,

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