Five Star Mother |
| Provided by Don Remily who forwarded this from George Arnold |
|
A good patriotic story..
Get a tissue before reading. Just a short story
about a small portion of the millions of Soldiers, Sailors, Airmen,
Guardsmen and Marines who have served our country and helped preserve
our freedom and independence. It's a little lengthy but worth the read. Many thanks to my friend Bobby Bradshaw for sharing it with me. Gumba Marine Family (Author
and forum unknown) I just wanted to get the day over with and go down to Smokey's for a few cold ones. Sneaking a look at my watch, I saw the time, 1655. Five minutes to go pulling my Reserve Duty Day at the Cemetery. Full dress was hot in the August sun. Oklahoma summertime was as bad as ever -- the heat and humidity at the same level -- too damned high. I saw the car pull into the drive, '69 or '70 model Deville, looked factory-new. It pulled into the
parking slot at a snail's pace. An old woman got out
so damned slow I thought she was paralyzed. She had a cane and a sheave
of flowers, about four or five bunches as best I could tell. I couldn't
help myself. The thought came unwanted, and left a slightly bitter
taste: "Shit! She's going to spend an hour, my damned hip hurts
like hell and I'm ready to get the hell out of here right, by-God,
now!." But my duty was to assist anyone coming in. Kevin would lock
the "in" gate and if I could hurry the old biddy along, we
might make the last half of happy hour. I broke Post
Attention. The hip made gritty noises when I took the first step and the
pain went up a notch. I must have made a real military sight;
middle-aged man with a small pot-gut and half a limp, in Marine Full
Dress
Uniform, which had lost its razor crease about 30 minutes after I began
the watch. I stopped in front of her, halfway up the walk. She looked up
at me with an old woman's squint. "Ma'am, can I
assist you in any way?" She took long enough to answer. "Yes, son. Can you carry these
flowers. I seem to be moving a tad slow these days." "My pleasure
Ma'am." Well, it wasn't too much of a lie. She looked again.
"Marine, where were you stationed?" "Vietnam, ma'am.
Ground-pounder. '69 to '71." She looked at me
closer. "Wounded in action, I see. Well done, Marine. I'll be
as quick as I can" I lied a little
bigger. "No hurry, Ma'am." She smiled, and winked
at me. "Son, I'm 85-years old and I can tell a lie from a long way
off. Let's get this done. Might be the last time I can come. My name's
Joanne Wieserman, and I've a few Marines I'd like to see one more
time." "Yes, ma'am. At
your service" She headed for the
World War I section, stopping at a stone. She picked one of the bunches
out of my arm and laid it on top of the stone. She murmured something I
couldn't quite make out. The name on the marble was
Donald S. Davidson, USMC, France 1918. She turned away and made a
straight line for the World War II section, stopping at one stone. I saw
a tear slowly tracking its way down her cheek. She put a bunch on a
stone; the name was Stephen X. Davidson, USMC, 1943. She went up the row
a ways and laid another bunch on a stone, Stanley J. Wieserman USMC,
1944. She paused for a
second, "Two more, son, and we'll be done." I almost didn't say
anything, but, "Yes, ma'am. Take your time." She looked confused.
"Where's the Vietnam section, son? I seem to have lost my
way." I pointed with my
chin. "That way, ma'am." "Oh!" she chuckled quietly. "Son, me and old age ain't too friendly." She headed down the
walk I'd pointed at. She stopped at a couple of stones before she found
the ones she wanted. She placed a bunch on Larry Wieserman USMC, 1968,
and the last on Darrel Wieserman USMC, 1970. She stood there and
murmured a few words I still couldn't make out. "OK, son, I'm
finished. Get me back to my car and you can go home." "Yes, ma'am. If I
may ask, were those your kinfolk?" She paused. "Yes,
Donald Davidson was my father; Stephan was my uncle; Stanley was my
husband; Larry and Darrel were our sons. All killed in action,
all Marines." She stopped, whether she had finished, or couldn't finish, I don't know. And never have. She
made her way to her car, slowly, and painfully. I waited for a polite
distance to come between us and double-timed it over to Kevin waiting by
the car. "Get to the out-gate quick, Kev. I have something I've Kev started to say something but saw the look I gave him. He broke the rules to get us there down the service road. We beat her, she hadn't made it around the rotunda yet. "Kev, stand to attention next to the gate post. Follow my lead."
I humped it across the drive to the other post. When the Cadillac came
puttering around from the hedges and began the short straight traverse
to the gate, I called in my best gunny's voice: "Tehen Hut!
Present Haaaarms!" I have to hand it to
Kev, he never blinked an eye; full dress attention and a salute that
would make his DI proud. She drove through that gate with two old
worn-out soldiers giving her a send off she deserved, for service
rendered to her country, and for knowing Duty, Honor and Sacrifice. I am not sure, but I
think I saw a salute returned from that Cadillac. Deputy Branch Head (D871) Information Technology Engineering SPAWAR Systems Center, San Diego, CA e-mail: bradshar@spawar.navy.mil |