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Omaha
      
      
      by
      Harry Buschman
      
      
      
      
      
      
      
      
      
      
      
      
      
      
      
      
      
      
      
      
      
      
      
      
      

If you could hear, at every jolt, the 
blood
Come gargling from the froth-corrupted lungs,
Obscene as cancer, bitter as the cud
Of vile, incurable sores on innocent tongues, --
My friend, you would not tell with such high zest
To children ardent for some desperate glory,
The old lie: Dulce et decorum est
Pro patria mori
Wilfred Owen
 
"Omaha," he said. He said it in a loving 
kind of way, like a man who might  suddenly remember the name of an old 
friend.
"What do you mean, Omaha?" I asked him. 
"You've never been to Omaha, Pop.  Omaha's out west. You've never been west 
of the Hudson River.
"I don't mean Omaha. I mean the place we 
called Omaha -- Omaha Beach."
I've been going out to see Pop every week 
at the Veteran's Hospital. Cindy and I had to put him out there when he broke 
his hip last month. Maybe after his therapy he'll be able to come home again. 
But we can't take care of him in the shape he is right now, one of us would have 
to stay home from work. 
"You've been talking with the boys again?" 
I asked him -- the vets in this ward all seem to have D-Day in common.
He looked up at me alertly and nodded. "I 
met a guy named Simon yesterday," he said. "He was at Utah -- company 'F' -- 
they were on our left. They had it easy at Utah."
"You'll never get it out of your head, Will 
you Pop?"
"The beach? No. Prob'ly not."
He looked at me as though I should have 
known better, and I guess I should by  now. I don't know how many times 
I've seen him like this. When I lived at home the three of us would go out 
someplace together -- Ma, him and me, and all of a sudden something would 
happen, and Pop would get this D-Day look on his face. That's what Ma used to 
call it, 'the D-Day look.' He'd be lost in some kind of remembering, and he 
wouldn't come back to us until he worked it out of his system. He didn't exactly 
ignore us, or forget we were there -- but it was plain he was going over 
something in his head, something we didn't have any part in. I looked at him 
now, shrunken and old -- if it wasn't for Cindy and me he'd have nobody in the 
world. Yet .... there's still that part of him he wants to keep to himself, 
something he wants to be private. 
Well .... I had to get going. I checked my 
watch and it was near supper time and there I was out at the Vet hospital two 
hours from home -- 'Cindy'll give me hell.' I thought.
"I have to be goin', Pop -- gettin' close 
to supper time."
He came back part way from that place in 
his mind enough to say, "Yeah, drive  careful, Herbie. Nice of you to drop 
by. How's Cindy, okay? Doc says I'm doin' pretty good -- have me up on my feet 
next week. Take a while for the knittin' though -- ain't as young as I used 
t'be."
I left him there and walked through miles 
of corridors filled with old soldiers in blue plaid bathrobes, some in 
wheelchairs like my father, some walking aimlessly. Each of them seemed to share 
their own part of a remote and exclusive world. I found my way out as quickly as 
I could, feeling unwelcome -- as though I had crashed my way into a private 
club. The parking lot was nearly empty and the wind blew through it cold and 
bitter, but the windows of the old building were brightly lit and looked warm in 
the early evening light. 
What would they be doing in there this 
evening? Fighting old battles, rolling up their sleeves to show the wounds that 
are so healed over only they can see  them, ticking off on their fingers 
the count of the dead at Remagen Bridge or the forest of the Ardennes.
"How's he getting on?" Cindy asked me.
"He'll be okay."
"Is he still..."
"Yes, worse than ever, now that he's with 
the others."
That night I couldn't sleep. I got to 
thinking of Pop and the others out there in the Vet Hospital. It wasn't only 
Pop, it was all of them -- they each had a private memory they carried with 
them. Their wives, their children were kept outside. They would take their story 
with them to the grave. I got out of bed and sat by the window. Elbows on my 
knees, head between my hands -- I tried to think of something in my life so big 
that it would be locked up in me forever. For the life of me I couldn't think of 
anything I couldn't share with Cindy.
What is it about war anyway? Why is there a 
brotherhood of men who fought  together that ordinary men can't be part of? 
I had never been to war -- Pop  had. Almost sixty years ago he waded ashore 
on a Godforsaken beach off the  coast of France on a cloudy summer day. 
Something happened to him there that  I will never understand.
"Your father's not responding. He should be by now -- the operation went well. A 
clean break. But, like so many of them out here, he doesn't want to go home." 
The doctor waved his hand to include the entire hospital. "Take a look around 
here. You wouldn't want to live here, would you?"
"No I wouldn't."
"He does, so do ninety percent of the 
others. It's a kind of brotherhood I guess." He opened a brown manila envelope 
and pulled out some color photos. "Look at this," he said. "This is his 
Echocardiography results -- exceptional for a man his age. He's in better shape 
than many of the vets from Desert Storm, and yet .... he wants to end his days 
here." He put the photographs away and stood up. "It's my duty to discharge him 
if he's well, but if I do that, he'll be back here in a week, sicker than ever."
"What do you want me to do, Doctor?"
"Go home, leave him here -- this is where 
he wants to be. If he changes his mind I'll let you know."
"I'd like to talk to him first, is that all 
right?"
"Sure. You know where he is -- third floor. 
Ward 6B. That's where the Omaha boys hang out."
The Omaha boys! It sounded like a 
vaudeville act. The Omaha boys in Ward 6B -- it was an act I would never 
understand. I would never appreciate the humor. They'd laugh and I'd look around 
wondering why they were laughing.
At the ward desk a nurse told me Pop was in 
the sunning parlor. "That's where they hang out," he told me. He was in the 
corner facing two windows looking out over the brown October fields; he swayed 
in a slow rhythm as though music was playing. He didn't recognize me until I sat 
down next to him. 
"Hi Pop. Just saw the hip doctor -- says 
you're doing fine."
"Herbie! Watch'ya doin' here? Wasn't you here just yesterday?"
"No Pop, a week ago. You know, Pop -- the 
Doctor's going to release you soon. Cindy and I can't wait to get you home with 
us again."
He turned the wheelchair around to face me. 
"I don't know how to tell you this, son .... but I'd just as soon stay here. 
It's got nothin' to do with you and Cindy -- it's just .... just ...." His voice 
trailed off and he drifted away again.
"Pop. Pop, what's the matter. Can't you 
tell me what's the matter?
His eyes seemed to come back in focus, and 
he looked at me hard for a second,  and as if the concentration was too 
much for him, he let the air out of cheeks and looked down at his feet. "I wish 
I had the words, Herbie. I wish I was smart enough t'make myself plain to you. 
It's hard to explain when you don't know what words to use. Nothin' that's ever 
happened since that day -- nothin' before neither. Gettin' married to your 
mother -- the day you come along -- nothin' -- nothin'. That day on the beach. I 
can't ever get past that day, it's like I'm still there."
"I guess I never had a day like that, Pop. 
Guess that's why I don't understand. But you belong with us, we're your family, 
Pop."
I could have sworn he didn't hear a word I 
said. "We wuz only young kids,  y'know? Early twenties -- green behind the 
ears. None of us had ever been to  Europe -- I had never been outta 
Yonkers, 'cept for that one weekend when my folks and me went to Washington. It 
wasn't right -- I mean we weren't ready for what they done to us."
"I guess that's what war's all about, Pop." 
"Guy I knew .... Shafroth was his name .... 
I called him Shaft. Come from Fall River -- we had the same birthday. We stuck 
together, him and me, we bunked next to each other, gambled together. We'd go 
t'town weekends together .... all the way to London. We'd pick up girls at the 
USO and go to the movies, then we'd compare how we made out after we got back to 
camp." 
He looked up at the ceiling and shook his 
head. "I pushed his dead body ahead of  me in the water. I didn't wanna 
leave him there, Herbie, and I was afraid to  go in alone. I kept him 
between me and the shore. There was the thr-r-rup, thr-r-rup of the bullets in 
the water all around, and if it wasn't for Shaft I'da been hit f'sure .... ain't 
that the strangest thing, Herbie? He saved my life -- after he was dead he saved 
my life. He saved yours too, didn't he. Poor Shaft -- he never lived to have 
children of his own, did he? Did he, Herbie! Answer me damn it, Herbie! Did 
he!?"
Pop let the wind out of himself and sort of 
slumped down into his chair, then he did something I had never seen him do 
before, even when Mom died. He buried his face in his hands and wept like a 
child. I looked around in the basket attached to his chair and found a plastic 
packet of tissues. I opened it and gave it to him.
"Oh, it was a terrible mornin' Herbie. No 
day for the beach. Gray skies and an east wind. There was fifteen of us. We were 
closer than family, when one of us was sick we'd watch out for him, and like if 
one of us was in trouble -- well, we'd cover for him -- lie if we had to." He 
put his hand out to me. 
"You can't know a friendship like that, 
Herbie, it's closer than brother to brother, father to son -- closer than man to 
wife even." Then his hand gripped mine tighter than I thought he could. "Then, 
Herbie -- to see what happened when the ramp went down! Nothin' between us and 
the beach. No protection! You know how big a 50 caliber bullet is, Herbie? No! 
'Course you don't. Big around as your thumb! .... and it'll drill its way 
through a brick wall. There was 'Cap Fosburgh, Sergeant Lanni, the two 
corporals, Tanner and Green." His eyes went wide and it was as if he could see 
them again. "To watch them, Herbie. Guys you loved, cut up like they was chopped 
meat."
"Pop -- please stop! Can't you forget it?"
He looked at me in pity and slowly shook 
his head. Then he turned his  wheelchair to the window so his back was to 
me. "No! I ain't forgettin' it, Herbie. Pushin' Shaft ahead'a me -- hidin' 
behind him -- see'n the pink in the water around us, and knowin' all the time 
what it was? I ditched him there in the shallow water and I run fer the shelter 
of the dunes." He showed me his empty hands, palms up. 
"I would'a drowned, Herbie .... if I had'na 
ditched my rifle, my belt -- if I could'a, I would'a ditched my shoes. Then I 
run .... oh God! how I run fer the dunes. I lay there not able t'breathe, 
lookin' back at Shaft in the shallow water like a bag of rags. He's still there 
Herbie. Ain't that the saddest thing -- he still ain't made it to the beach?" He 
wheeled around again to face me. "Go home, Herbie -- go home."
I stood before him and put my hands on his 
shoulders -- he felt so frail. I kissed the top of his head, smooth and pink as 
a baby's. So many memories locked up inside. How strong he must have been -- to 
have gone through so much, so far from home, so young .... so young.
"I'll see you next week, Pop."

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