Chapter Seventy-Two
Back in the safety of their base camp, Kermit sat at a table with his head in his hands. Several of his fellow Marines surrounded him, trying to give him the support he needed. Geraldson silently kept a hand on the frog’s back while Larsen gave optimistic predictions of how much information their new POW would give them and Pine emphasized how minimal the man’s wounds were.
“A prosthetic thumb, a couple months of rehab, and he won’t even notice anything was ever wrong,” he said. “That shot in the leg, Frog, that was brilliant. Barely nicked him. He only needed a Band-Aid. Just enough to convince him not to run.”
“Frog’s too forgiving,” Plank said, his eyes blank. “That creep deserved to die.”
“But instead, he gets to give us all sorts of information to help us stop the people he was working for,” Larsen said firmly.
“Boys, make some room,” Major D. said as he pushed his way to the center of the crowd. “Holt, turn that thing off. The whole world doesn’t need to know every detail.”
“Yes sir.” Holt obediently turned off the camera and let it hang by his side.
Major D. poured something into a very small cup that none of them had seen before. He set it down in front of Kermit. “Drink this,” he said as he sat. “I don’t have much of the stuff, so that’s all you get. But don’t tell anyone, or I could get in all sorts of trouble.”
Kermit stared at him, confused. “Sir?”
“Sometimes, you need something stronger than water,” the Major said matter-of-factly.
Kermit understood. He picked up the cup and sniffed. It was too strong for his liking, but he sipped at it anyway. “Thank you, sir,” he said softly.
Major D. patted the frog’s back. “You did good, Frog. But I know it doesn’t feel that way.”
Kermit shook his head.
The Eyes had been watching him since the moment he had touched that gun.
“You won’t believe me if I say you’re a hero,” Major D. said.
“It’s true, though,” Larsen piped up. “You saved all of us, Frog. Saved that entire town.”
All of the men nodded firmly, though Plank closed his eyes to do so.
Kermit sipped at the tiny cup as if he hadn’t noticed them—but he had, of course. “I don’t like being a hero. Not this kind, anyway,” he whispered. He shook his head. “It just feels awful.”
“When you’re done drinking that, I want you to go see Cogswell,” Major D. said. “All of you boys, go see Cogswell. He’s gonna be just fine, but I’d wager he could use some company.”
“Yes sir,” several of them replied.
Later, as they were headed for the medical tent, Geraldson trailed behind the rest of the group to get the frog alone. “You fired three bullets today,” he said softly, “But your mind’s really on a different bullet, isn’t it?”
Kermit nodded. “Different target. Different gun. But it all feels the same.”
“It isn’t. You
know it isn’t, Frog.” Geraldson’s face was firm. “If you hadn’t shot him, who knows how many lives would’ve been lost. Hundreds, easily.” He swallowed hard, carefully watching his friend. “…And if it weren’t for the bullet
you’re thinking about, you wouldn’t have been here to do it. I wouldn’t have been here, either.”
Kermit stopped walking. “That little boy didn’t have to die, Bob,” he said, his voice harsh. “I could’ve … disabled him, like I did today. I could have shot him in the arm, or the leg, or…” And then The Eyes were there, struck with fear. And The Eyes slowly began to crystalize with a basic, dreaded understanding…
Geraldson grabbed him by the shoulders and shook him hard. “He still could have shot us. He
would have. You did what you had to do, Kermit. Not
once have you done
anything with a gun that you didn’t
have to do.”
Kermit’s breath caught, and he fell against his friend with a tight hug. Neither of them moved or spoke again until he had somehow managed to push The Eyes away.
“Plank is next,” Kermit whispered then. “You know it, don’t you?”
“Yeah,” Bob said. “Yeah, I know.”
“Major D. will put it off. He always does,” Kermit whispered.
“Yeah,” Bob said. “We’ll take care of him, Frog. As long as we can.”
That was all they needed to say. Pfc. Benjamin Plank was the only one in the unit who couldn’t see what was coming.
“Come on, Frog,” Bob said, releasing him from the hug. “Let’s go see Cogswell.”
~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~
The atmosphere around Cogswell’s bed was a welcome relief after the day they’d had. Painkillers were in short supply, so the men considered it their duty to joke around in attempt to make their comrade less miserable.
Cogswell was propped up with gauze over his shoulder and his arm in a sling. It was a familiar sight for Kermit—he’d been in the exact same position in this very tent.
“Hurts a whole lot, doesn’t it, Cogswell?” Kermit said. “There just aren’t any words for how much it hurts.”
Cogswell glanced at Holt before he answered. “I can think of quite a
few words, Frog,” he said through clenched teeth, “But the censors wouldn’t like
any of them.”
Kermit smirked. “Well, you always
did have a dirtier mouth than me.”
“Not that
your mouth was always so perfectly clean
either, Frog,” Larsen said with a wicked gleam in his eyes. “I mean, there were a couple of weeks back in training…”
“Don’t say that in front of the camera!” Kermit said desperately. “They’ll hear about it back home, and they’ll
never let me live it down!”
“Oh, I dunno, Frog,” Geraldson said. “I mean,
we let you live it down.”
“Well—yeah, but that’s because you guys
had to,” Kermit explained. “It was all your fault to begin with.”
Casper didn’t agree. “How the hel—”
“Camera!” Larsen scolded.
“—
Heck was it our fault?”
“Casper, I think you just proved the frog’s point,” Pine chuckled.
“Exactly,” Kermit said smugly. “You’re all
terrible influences.” With a glance at the quietest one among them, he added, “Especially Plank.”
Plank lifted his head and smirked. “That’s just how I grew up, Frog,” he said. “The only time I didn’t swear was when I was talkin’ to Mama.”
“Because she’d wash your mouth out with soap?” Larsen guessed.
“Oh no.” Plank’s face fell, and he shook his head. “She’d just hit me with whatever she had in her hand. Or at least wave it around at me. Like the time when
that man came looking for money, and she chased him away—”
“With a vacuum cleaner,” everyone else around the bed recited, with the exception of Holt.
“We know, Plank. We’ve heard it a few times,” Pine said.
“But Holt hasn’t,” Kermit mused. “Have you?”
“No sir.”
“Don’t call me sir. And that means the camera hasn’t heard it either, right?”
“Yes si—er…” The men laughed while Holt tried and failed to choose another way to address the amphibian Lance Corporal.
“So Plank, why don’t you tell it again,” Kermit said. It wasn’t really for Holt or the at-home viewer’s sake that he wanted the tale repeated, but Plank enjoyed telling it, and maybe it would help Cogswell think about something other than the pain in his shoulder.
“Well—” But Plank stopped before he began, scowling. “I guess I have to explain who
that man is, don’t I?”
“That’s simple,” Larsen said, and he looked at the camera. “
That man is an individual who, by an unfortunate technicality, is
genetically one of Plank’s parents.”
“…That’s a good way to put it,” Plank said.
Larsen shrugged. “I’ve explained something similar for some of my siblings.”
Holt pulled his head back from the camera and gave him a baffled look, which made Larsen laugh.
“I suppose the camera doesn’t understand that, either,” he said, and he winked at Holt before he frowned thoughtfully. “
That, I’m not so good at explaining,” he sighed.
“Larsen has dozens of siblings,” Kermit gently explained to Holt and the camera, “Because his parents have taken in so many foster kids.” He turned to Larsen. “I know you don’t like that word for it, Guss, but it
is the legal term.”
Larsen uneasily shrugged it off. “A lot of them stick around. We’re still their family. A
real home for them. No matter what.”
“That’s all you need sometimes,” Emerson said. “Just someone to be there for you. To care.”
“To
know that someone cares,” Plank said quietly. He was looking down now. His eyes were dark as his fingers traced the camouflage in his pants.
Kermit nudged him with his elbow. “You know it
now, don’t you?”
Plank didn’t answer, but he didn’t have to, either. Looking the frog in the eyes was answer enough.
“Can we get back to the vacuum-waving?” Cogswell muttered, his eyes half-closed.
They chuckled, and Plank gave his most detailed description yet of how his mother had hefted a vacuum cleaner up and waved it around as easily as if it had been a broomstick, but with all the threat of a giant battle axe, dragging the cord behind as she had chased
that man out the door. And they somehow managed to laugh again, not only at the tale that most of them knew painfully well, but also at how several of them somehow kept getting distracted by some pretty nurses.
It was late when they separated to their different tents to sleep. With the camera off for the night, Kermit quietly talked to Holt.
“What we were talking about before, about knowing that someone cares about you,” he said softly. “
You know it, too … Don’t you?”
Holt frowned thoughtfully. “Sir?”
“You’re one of us,” Kermit explained, and he put a hand on his companion’s back. “Hide behind that camera all you want.
We care about you. You’re one of us.”
Holt nodded and stared down at his feet as they walked. “Rough day today,” he whispered.
Kermit nodded. “One of the worst,” he agreed. His fingers rubbed over the bump under his uniform where his locket lay, still unopened.
As awful as the day had been, he didn’t need to look into that heart of gold just yet.