Cemetery Street by John Zunski (ebook reader color screen .txt) đ
- Author: John Zunski
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I taunted her as she jumped, her short, stocky frame failing to reach my outstretched hand. âGive it to me you prick,â she screamed.
I lowered the envelope, waved it in front of her, only to raise it when she lunged. âI already did, and now youâre knocked up.â
Jennyâs beady eyes glowered. Her right foot found its mark. I crumpled to the ground. Laughter erupted as I brought my knees to my chest. I cursed in agony. Jenny snatched the envelope. For good measure, she kicked my lower back and then my ass, before storming off.
From that day on, Jenny was known as The Nutcracker. My new nickname was Mouse. Lucas said it was because how I squealed after Jennyâs foot found paydirt. On a positive note, I only had two months of public humiliation before graduation.
Two months after graduation, world events happened. Our little corner of Cemetery Street would never be the same. August 2nd, nineteen ninety isnât an infamous day. But it did begin a downward spiral that twisted through January 16th, and March 2nd, nineteen ninety-one and culminated on December 19th, nineteen ninety-eight. How I wish those dates could be just meaningless days in my pathetically petty life.
âDid you watch the news?â Shannie asked on August 2nd.
âNo.â
âIraq invaded Kuwait.â
âSo?â
âThereâs going to be a war.â
âWhatâs the big deal?â As time passed, I understood her emotion. Count was in the middle of the mess. So began our vigil; CNN our alter.
âTrust me, good old Mr. Thousand points of light isnât going to sit by and watch Saddam suck up the oil.
âThatâs the first step,â Shannie proclaimed when President Bush announced an embargo of Iraq. âBut thatâs not good enough!â Days later as the European Community and the U.N. announced like embargoes. Shannie told the television, âBush is lining up the dominos, itâs a matter of time before he tips them.â
What really had Shannie upset was Count not returning phone calls. âHeâs not getting my messages,â she lamented. âWhy else wouldnât he return my calls?â
âMaybe heâs busy preparing for war,â I said. Shannie scowled. âHe is a soldier; war is his job.â
âYouâre an asshole!â
I shrugged and returned my attention to CNN. News broke that the Saudiâs invited United States military forces into the kingdom. In the days following, Shannie and I watched endless flights of men and materiel head for Saudi Arabia.
The morning of August 17th began like any other. I crawled out of bed, took a quick glance at the Ortolan house, and stumbled into the shower. I had a busy day at work. We had two funerals. Two graves needed to be opened and sealed. Working for Bear wasnât bad, the pay sucked, but grave digging wasnât a career - just a way to earn a few bucks before starting community college. Since the Iraqi business started, Bear was testy. I canât blame him, we all were. In Fernwood, it was impossible not to feel tension lurking behind every tombstone. Considering the juxtaposition of his and his only childâs professions, Iâm sure Bear couldnât escape the obvious conclusion - I couldnât.
Such thoughts filled my head as I made breakfast. The phone rang, breaking my trance. âJesus Christ Morrison, you always so pleasant in the morning?â Count asked.
âHey dude! Whatâs up?â
âYou a moron?â he laughed. âHavenât been watching the news?â
âWhat a pisser, IâŠ.â
âWe missed Panama, we not missing this one.â
âCool,â I answered stupidly.
âMorrison, I canât talk long, listen up. Weâre shippinâ out for Saudi in a few hours. I want you to look after Flossy, you hear? Sheâs going to be a nervous wreck. Tell her Iâm fine. Tell her not to listen to all the negative bullshit on the news. Weâre proâs doing a proâs job.â Count paused as heavy equipment rumbled by. âTake care of Ortolan,â he resumed. âSheâs too smart for her own good. But sheâs fragile. When I get back, Iâm going to sit you two down and have a talk about the ways of the world.â
âYeah,â I smiled.
âGood. We donât have to worry about Mrs. O. And my old man can handle himself. Donât let me down, I donât want to hear about any problems at home when Iâm in the desert, or Iâll come back and straighten you out. You hear me?â
âSir. Yes, sir,â I mocked.
âGood. Donât panic when you donât hear from me, far as I know there ainât no phones in the desert. I promised Shannie Iâll write her every chance I get. Donât take it personal if you donât hear from me. I promised too much agreeing to write Ortolan. Iâm sure sheâll show you my letters.â
âWill do,â I answered.
âIf your grandfather could see me now - patch and all.â
âHeâd be proud of you,â I said. âIf he was alive, heâd buy you a beer.â
His tone turned somber. âYouâve been like the brother I never had. If anything happens to me, help Bear take care of things. You make sure everybody is okay.â
âSure thing,â I answered.
âCool,â he repeated. âI have to run. Wish me luck.â
âGood luck; giveâ em hell.â
âGood-bye James,â he said.
âGodspeed dude,â I answered.
The line went dead.
Godspeed? I questioned the persistent dial tone. Where the fuck did that come from? I stared at receiver. It wasnât part of my vocabulary. A sour taste settled in my mouth as I returned the receiver to its cradle. Count never said Good-bye, ever!
I spent many late summer and early autumn evenings in my perch, gazing past rows of gravestones towards the converted chapel. I witnessed the dying sun pursued across the cemetery by duskâs melancholy gray. Each night, the security light atop the maintenance shed light flickered on, a lone sentinel against eternal blackness.
Heâll be all right, I tried convincing myself. As desert shield drug on, my doubts deepened. Hope seemed fleeting as the late autumn sun.
Chapter 11 Letters
Among the greatest of Shannieâs accomplishments was haranguing Count into journaling his experiences during Desert Shield/Desert Storm. In school, Count never wrote a single paper. I have it on good information he paid Shannie to write his. Count wasnât Harvard material, but he wasnât anyoneâs idiot. Heâs letters prove he didnât apply himself in school â he applied himself at life.
Countâs letters are treasures. Now a days, when I make it home, its tradition to sit about Dianeâs kitchen table and reread Countâs words. Weâre blessed with the opportunity to glimpse the possibility life once promised, if only we had the energy to recapture its elusiveness.
We share bittersweet laughs seeing how Count struggled not to let his trash mouth run amok. Iâve edited out most of his four letter words while trying to maintain his personality. As his letter writing campaign progressed, scribbled out profanities became less-frequent. Hereâs an example of how his letters would have read: We arrived in fucking country yesterday. We flew into fucking Dhahran, King Fucking Fahd⊠To quote Count: âYou get the picture?â
Countâs Letters:
Dear Shannie, August 19th, 1990
We arrived in country yesterday. We flew into Dhahran, King Fahd International Airport. On the flight, some idiot started a rumor that weâd have to come off the plane gunâs blazing; that the Iraqiâs would be waiting. When we landed, I guess you can say that we unloaded with our asses blazing. Stepping out of the plane was like stepping into a clothes dryer. Somebody said it was 142 on the tarmac, 128 on the desert floor. I donât know if thatâs true. Whatever it was, I never felt heat like this before. I feel like a stick of butter in a skillet. Iâm telling you, all you do is sweat. Get a load of this shit, we have orders to drink eight gallons of water a day. You read me right! Eight gallons - a person- a day. I donât know about anyone else, but this is one order I wonât have a problem following. I never thought I could piss so much. I feel like a walking water recycling factory.
And if the heat ainât bad enough, the flies are freaking atrocious. Theyâre national bird of Saudi Arabia. Imagine the Russian Jewâs junkyard in mid-July, times it by a million. You get the picture? And if the flies ainât bad enough thereâs this dust, an engineer buddy of mine says itâs from marl being ground by trucks and boots, it gets on everything; it sticks to you like flour. Mix that dust and heat and you kind of feel like youâre in a bakerâs oven. Other than that, this place is great - better than Hawaii! You really need to contact a travel agent and book a flight. You donât know what youâre missing. Do me a favor and tell everyone Iâm fine. Phones are scarce so I doubt Iâll be calling anyone.
Count
PS. This letter thing ainât too bad. I donât think Iâll have a problem writing home like you asked. Hell, I think Iâm going to need to. Keep me from going nuts.
Shannie, August 26th, 1990
This place is the twilight zone!. We didnât step out of a plane into Saudi. We stepped out into hell! In hell there ainât no fire and brimstone, thereâs sun, dust and flies. Remember the Amityville horror? The one with all the flies - thatâs almost as bad as this dung pile. And the heat, it presses so hard against you, you feel claustrophobic in the wide open desert. You best say your prayers girl, âcause if you donât, when you croak, you going to find yourself in Saudi Arabia.
The fan belts, thatâs what we call the Saudis, are building this tent city for us. These tents are called Hajs, they use these things for the pilgrims who visit Mecca. Other than keeping out the sun, I wouldnât use âem for toilet paper, the goddamn things are cheap. When a wind blows up, the tents blow away. I guess itâs the fan belts way of telling us to hurry the hell up and get the job done.
Thereâs a lot of mistrust between the Saudiâs and us. Because of the terrorist threat, theyâre only permitted to work under the eyes of our MPs. I guess they think weâre going to like corrupt their morals, rape their women or soil their sand or something. I mean theyâre always throwing you the evil eye, lets you know that they donât like us being here, but theyâre also smart enough to know the alternative is worse. One thing I like about those fuckers is this rule they have with each other. When theyâre standing up the hajs, and they go about hammering the stakes into the ground, if one of them smashes the other guyâs hand with the sledge, they switch spots, you know, the spotter becomes the sledge swinger and the sledge swinger becomes the spotter, pretty clever if you ask me. I think the army should take note, if officers fuck up, they should switch spots with some of us NCOs, thatâll learn their asses.
Other then that, itâs typical army bullshit. You know, hurry up and wait. And waiting means you can stand around for hours scratching your nuts. You always said racing to the red light. You pegged army life. Rumors run wild, most of them so buku crazy even a piss on like me knows theyâre full of shit. Every night a new one circulates that tonightâs the night the Iraqis cross the border.
Count
PS. I figure youâd want to know why we call the Arabs fan belts. Itâs âcause of that rubber thing they wear to keep their headdress in place. Get this, one retard in my squad insists the headdresses
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