Bulleit Proof. Tom Bulleit

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by my ear. A bullet. Then another bullet screams, and another, then the air rains bullets, storms of dust and sand ripping around me, biting my legs, my side, my hands. I bend to peer into the distance and decide I may be caught in a crossfire, Company C firing into the bunker, at the Viet Cong, with us in the way. I turn from the front side, roll back, rise, and head back down to the bottom of the hill. Moving slowly, I drip sweat and smell blood, not my own, I determine. Then—pulsating flashes of light, of fire, of swirling black smoke, and then, unmistakably, the smell of death. Behind me, squads two and three lob grenades into the bunker, blasting out the Viet Cong. I keep inching downhill, tasting gunpowder, the odor of death seeping through my clothes.

      The brilliant colors fade out and then—nothing. A gray pallor. Silence. In a heartbeat, the horror movie I’ve wandered into ends. I head toward camp, feeling dazed, tripping over shadows, the taste of gunpowder still caked in my mouth, the stench of death oozing out of my skin.

      Kneeling by a body, I reach for a pulse and my fingers sink to the bone, the Marine’s hand attached by only a frayed ligament. I search for further wounds and find a tiny, bloodless hole in his abdomen. I fall back, sit on the road, squint up at the sky. Lifeless. I close my eyes and picture the word, the letters—Life. Less. Less than life? What does that mean? What the hell does that mean?

      We’re all dead, I think. Us. Them. All of us. The odor of death burning my nostrils, I look back at the dead Marine before me and I think, why?

      What brings men to this?

       * * *

      Sometime later, the weeks melding into months, I corner my gunnery sergeant.

      “Gunny,” I say, “I’m requesting a day off.”

      He glares at me. Apparently, no one has ever before asked him for a day off.

      “What? he says.

      “I need to go to Da Nang.”

      “What for?”

      “I want to take the LSAT.”

      “The LS-what?”

      “The LSAT. The exam to get into law school.”

      “What the hell.”

      “I know,” I say. I consider telling him about the promise I made to my father, look at his scowling face, think better of it.

      “They give this test in Da Nang?” he says.

      “Takes pretty much all day,” I say, then I laugh. “Law school, right?”

      “What the hell,” Gunny says again, meaning no, moving away from me.

      I wait him out. A few weeks later, I approach him after he’s downed several beers with his buddies at the NCO club.

      “Sorry, to bother you, Gunny, but I was wondering about taking the LSAT? In Da Nang? Remember I told you about it—”

      He starts to teeter, catches himself. He stares at me. He shows no recognition. He scrutinizes my face, trying to place me.

      “Da Nang, right?” he says finally.

      “Yes, sir. It’s actually in a few days—”

      Gunny grunts. Calling over his shoulder, “What the hell,” this time meaning yes.

      Gunny arranges for a Jeep and a driver who’s either a professional racecar driver or insane. He roars down dirt roads, accelerates onto the one asphalt road, a coastal highway, Highway 1, the Jeep fishtailing, swerving, at one point barely missing a farmer leading a yoked water buffalo. Riding shotgun, I cling to my door, occasionally glancing over my shoulder at the other member of our party, a machine gunner standing in the back of the Jeep, manning a M60 that protrudes from the back like a steel snout. Eventually, in a cloud of dust, we arrive at Da Nang, a resort town—soldiers, sailors, civilians clustered around stalls selling food, clothing, cookware, and beauty supplies. The driver parks the Jeep and I go in search of the testing site. After several failed tries, I find it, a tent not far from a string of bars. I walk in and the test administrator greets me with a knowing nod. He seems to be expecting me. He brings me to my assigned spot, a small card table. I unholster my .45 pistol, place it on the table, sit down, and begin taking the test. After completing the first page of questions, I know I will pass. I’ve studied the LSAT Guide some, preferring to lose myself in Tolstoy’s War and Peace, but I feel in control of these questions and answers. I’m doing well, I think as I fly through the test. It’s as though I can see my future, my destiny, my promise to my dad. It turns out I will always know how I will do on law school exams, a function not of clairvoyance, but of excessive preparation. The lesson here, is simply—be prepared, the Boy Scouts’ wise and timeless motto.

      I hand the administrator my finished test, grab my pistol, duck out of the tent, and get back in the Jeep. Weeks later, I receive the results. As I expected, I’ve aced the LSAT.

      I now humbly offer this advice to anyone deciding to take the LSAT. Study, sleep the night before, and bring a pistol. Worked for me.

If It Doesn't Seem Right, It Probably Isn't (Trust Your Gut)

      1969

       BACK IN THE WORLD.

      That’s what we call our return.

      Few of us call it coming home.

      We depart for Vietnam as one person and come back another. Many of us are unrecognizable even to ourselves.

      We’ve changed—emotionally, spiritually, physically. We return with broken bodies, smashed spirits, shattered hearts, confused minds. We escape the battlefields of Vietnam, eluding the horror and chaos, only to land in new, unfamiliar chaos, an internal war—back in the world—a world we thought we knew.

      Fear drives me. I fear that I will fail to make a living, that I will struggle to find my place in the “real world,” and most of all, that I will disappoint my parents, especially my father. And I fear that I won’t keep my promise. That fear drives me most of all.

      My parents have aged. My mother

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