Roundup In Quang Ngia (December 2000 | Volume: 51, Issue: 8)

Roundup In Quang Ngia

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December 2000 | Volume 51, Issue 8

One morning on my second tour of duty in Vietnam, this time with the 101st Airborne, my squad leader announced, “Men, day after tomorrow we’re all going to become cowboys.” The plan was to evacuate a valley in Quang Ngia Province of all residents and farm animals. Then we would spray something that would remove the leaves from the trees so that Charlie couldn’t hide. People and smaller livestock would be choppered out in Chinooks, but the large stuff, maybe 500 head of cows and water buffalo, we would herd to the mouth of the valley.

The operation began as scheduled. Even before we’d moved out to our starting positions, someone in the battalion started a tuneless recital that quickly caught on:

“Everybody now, say good morning to the world.”

“Morning, world.”

“Now, good morning, Nam.”

“Morning, Nam.”

“Good, Now let’s all say good morning to the lifers [career soldiers].”

“Morning, lifers.”

“Excellent! Now all together, good morning, cows.”

“Mooooooo. …”

Every American knows that driving cattle is arduous work, even for the experienced, well-mounted, and equipped cowpoke. Just try it without experience or proper equipment, on foot, with a 60- to 80-pound rucksack on your back, running through flooded rice paddies, elephant grass, and thick brush, in 100-degree weather.

One rainy night about a week into the operation I was sound asleep when I heard the repeated whispering of my name. It was Doc Wheatfield, an easygoing, soft-spoken young man of medium build and light brown skin, whose general disposition and importance to us made him very popular and respected. He was our platoon’s medic.

“Yeah, Doc. What’s up?”

“Sergeant B told me to get you and a couple of your guys to go with me. We got us an emergency to deal with. One of the village ladies is about to have a baby.”

“Hell, Doc, why us? We pulled drag on the herd all afternoon.”

Doc simply said, “Let’s go.” John, Peewee, Irish, the Cherry (our nickname for every new recruit), and I fell in behind Doc as he led the way out of the little cluster of trees where we had set up for the night. We took the rice-paddy dike trail that led to the next cluster of trees, where the lady waited.

We forgot our apprehension about the tempting targets we made out in the open when we reached our destination and saw the rain- and tear-streaked, frightened face of a young girl lying against an old banyan tree.

She couldn’t have been more than 16. Her black peasant clothing was soaked and plastered against her shivering body. Why she was outdoors in the rain instead of in one of the nearby huts, and why she was alone, except for an equally frightened five- or six-year-old boy clutching her hand, we never learned.

Doc told Peewee