Читать книгу Every Man for Himself - Mark J. Hannon - Страница 26

Оглавление

CHAPTER 22

NORTH PARK, 1944

Joe sat at the kitchen table, having finished his breakfast, and read about the allied attacks on the Gustav Line in Italy. The map on the front page showed two swooping arrows representing the maneuvers of the British and American armies, as they drove the Germans northward. The articles told of the tanks, planes, and units in the struggle; and Ernie Pyle’s column told of the soldiers pushing trucks in knee-deep mud, and boys about Pat and Charley’s age being crippled by mines, and blinded by shrapnel.

As those two scraped the last of the rationed eggs and bacon onto their forks, Joe looked up from his Courier Express at them and imagined them in the war. Good God, he thought, It might happen any time now.

Charley seemed to have read his father’s mind. The nineteen-year-old belched behind his hand, said “Excuse me,” and folded his hands on the table before himself, as he had done in the past, when he was ready to advance his latest great idea to the family. Pat, meanwhile, was taking his plate and silverware over to the sink.

“Dad, I’ve been meaning to talk to you about something,” Charley said.

“What’s that, Charley?”

“I’ve been thinking,” Charley replied, which set his father slightly on edge, for it usually meant he was ready to launch some risky scheme, if he hadn’t already.

“I’m nineteen, almost twenty now, and signed up for the draft. They might call me up any time, so I figured I’d just go and join the branch I wanted to get into first, rather than wait for them to come get me.”

“And?” Joe said, adjusting his rimless glasses.

“I figured I’d join the Navy,” Charley told him, thinking of palm trees and hula dancers in the Pacific.

“Well,” Joe began slowly, thinking of the picture in the Courier of the battleship West Virginia exploding in Pearl Harbor. “I think that wherever you might go, boys, it’s bound to be dangerous. There’s names printed in church bulletins all over town every Sunday of soldiers, sailors, and Marines dying, and being wounded, all over the world. Perhaps it might be better to wait and see where your duty to your country lies, and let the draft board make the decision that’s best for the country.” Joe looked at the two boys.

Pat knitted his brows in silent dissatisfaction and Charley squeezed his lips together and gave a little shake of his head.

They were silent for a moment, then Charley spoke.

“I already signed up, Pop. Went downtown and checked up on things. The guy there said I’ll be shipping out for the Pacific for sure. And Pat . . .”

Joe had expected something like this brash foolishness from Charley, but he stared at his ever-steady Pat in disbelief.

“I joined the Army same day, Pop. They need us, Dad. They’re talking about invading France. We’re liable to miss the whole thing if we don’t get through basic soon . . .”

Joe shook his head, stood up, and looked out the window, a single tear coming down his cheek.

“I know you’ve got to do your duty, boys, but it’ll kill your mother, the way she worries about you.”

“What’s that?” Eileen said, coming down the back stairs in her bathrobe.

“The boys, mother,” Joe said, holding his palm out to keep the youth seated, “have been talking about joining up.”

“It’s okay, Ma,” Charley said, hurriedly. “I’m sure I’ll be in basic for weeks, then traveling all the way out west, then on a slow boat to some quiet island in the Navy.”

Joe locked eyes with Eileen, who clutched the folds of her robe together over her chest. She looks so pale, he thought.

Pat stared down at his plate and said quietly, “It’s our duty to our country, Mom. We’ve already signed up.”

XYZ

“Ah, ya damn, young fools,” Joe exclaimed. “You couldn’t wait, could you? You couldn’t wait for the draft! You couldn’t even wait for me to break it to your mother that gave you life! If something . . .” He stopped, being on the edge of saying something he’d regret forever. Nobody moved, and the room went silent, except for Eileen’s quiet sobbing.

Every Man for Himself

Подняться наверх