The only other time I was smoked as
an individual was due to an investigation. An investigation as to who had chewing tobacco. I know, how trifling. No one was allowed to chew or smoke
tobacco during basic. Even the
drills weren’t supposed to smoke, chew or drink around the privates, so you
know damn well they were always in a pissy mood and if they couldn’t do it we’d be punished harshly for such acts.
One of the drills still managed to fill his camelback with whiskey for
every march we did. We got a buzz
just smelling it come out of his sweaty pores.
The
person in question during this investigation was someone I became good pals
with, JT. He was a tall, skinny,
white Kentucky boy with a southern draw and lots of confidence. JT wasn’t afraid of anything and he
enjoyed living life to the fullest.
He was the guy that would take bets to eat certain critters, such as a
thumb sized, multi-colored, hairy caterpillar. JT was going thru basic to be in the National Guard, or
Nasty Girl as us regular army people called them. One thing JT missed just as much as his girlfriend during
basic was chewing tobacco. Somehow
he had it smuggled in and had gotten away with it for a couple of months, but
he messed up and a drill found a dip can hidden in the bathroom, or latrine,
excuse my French. Learning
military dialect was always hilarious to me.
The
drill was furious that one of his privates was enjoying something that he could
not openly do. This is when drills
take their platoons to the “Pit.”
The Pit was a 50 x 50 foot area filled with 3-5 inches of sawdust. If you managed to piss the drill off to
the point of going to the Pit then you were in for a long fucking day. The Pit was covered to keep the sawdust
extra dry. As you do various
exercises the sawdust kicks up and you have no choice but to inhale it into
your lungs. This makes breathing
very difficult and usually creates quick results when a drill needs
answers. Unfortunately for our
drills, we were a tight nit platoon and not so eager to rat on a good man. Unfortunately for JT there would
eventually be a rat and it would be one of his own bunkmates.
I was in the leadership
room with only four others.
Typically if anyone messed up, we would be replaced. We made it thru most of the 16 weeks of
training together, which was unheard of.
JT was one of those leaders.
The rat in the house, Ritalin, was another. Ritalin was only in that room because he was good with
computer programs the drills used to keep all the private’s training and
progress in order. Ritalin had
dark brown hair and freckles peppered his cheeks. He was of average height, thin, completely nonathletic and
annoyingly hyper. The kid was also
a pathological liar.
Ritalin knew we couldn’t prove
anything he said during basic, so he filled us with a lot of BS. He told us his great, great grandfather
was the first recipient of the Medal of Honor during the Civil War and that his
brother had recently earned one in Iraq as a scout. Ritalin said his brother was killed while earning the medal,
so of course none of us contested his proud claims.
After
basic I regained access to the Internet and did some research. That lying motherfucker. He also claimed that he was higher
ranking than all of us, because he had done college courses and JROTC during
high school. The rank was
definitely a lie too; only it was a drill that called him out in front of
everyone.
“That’s
not the way it works, private, so shut the fuck up!“ yelled the drill.
If
our eyes represented applause, that drill got the longest call for an encore in
the history of mankind that day.
Back
in the Pit we continued to sweat and gasp for air.
“Whoever
did it just fess up and stop being a blue falcon,” cried Ritalin.
“Shut
the fuck up, private!” even the drill despised that little shit bird.
The
term “blue falcon” was synonymous with “buddy fucker.” The drill realized the Pit wasn’t
working and sent us into the barracks to stand by for another smoke
session. As the drills were
plotting our torturous night to come, the platoon’s leaders gathered.
“Vance,
I’m just going to call it,” JT told me.
“Yeah,
you should admit it you fucking buddy fucker!” Ritalin screeched.
“Just
for that outburst, let it ride JT,” I suggested while glaring at Ritalin, “as
far as the drill knows, that dip can has been in the latrine since the last
cycle of privates.”
Ritalin
looked like he was going to cry. A
drill walked into our room first.
“I’m
going to make the walls wet with your sweat if I don’t get answers, privates.”
I
could tell immediately he was bluffing and about to just smoke us for a few
minutes then call it a night.
Ritalin wasn’t so good at reading people.
“I
know who did it drill sergeant,” the drill turned to Ritalin and he about
crapped his pants, “well, I mean, I know that Vance knows who did it, drill
sergeant.”
“The
fuck I do Ritalin,” I denied.
“Watch
your fuckin’ mouth, Vance,” the drill snapped, “Well, who did it?”
“Drill
sergeant, I do not know who did it.”
“Yeah
you do Vance, just say it,” yet another weak, whiny cry from Ritalin that made
me think of the part from the Never-Ending Story where the girl keeps saying,
“Say my name Atreyu, just say my naaaaaaame.” You know what I’m talking about ‘80’s babies!
“No
I do not.”
“Step
into my office, Vance,” said the drill with a calmer voice.
JT
looked like he was about to say something as the drill turned his back, but I
shook my head at him to keep quiet.
The drill smoked me for only a few minutes. We both knew I wasn’t going to talk even though we both knew
I had answers. JT was too good of
a man to watch me suffer so he told the drill the truth and said I knew
nothing. It was a blatant lie
about my knowledge of the situation, but neither JT nor the drill believed a
person should be punished for not ratting in that particular situation.
Unfortunately
for JT, lying to a non-commissioned officer, or NCO, was a punishable
offense. He was kicked out of the
leadership room and paperwork was being done to strip his Private First Class
E-3 rank to be replaced by Private E-2 rank. He was also put on 30 days extra duty, which meant the
drills would have extra work for him even after each long day of training. The next 30 days would suck for
JT. As he was getting an initial
ass chewing from a drill, I was in the leadership room with Ritalin.
“See
dude, its all good,” Ritalin said in an attempt to rid my face of rage.
I
was seeing red and I know the room was left to just us by our other bunkmates
for a reason. It was a moment that
happened throughout basic in different forms for a private to be fixed
violently by another private. We
never had “pillow fights,” which were pillowcases filled with soap bars used to
beat a blue falcon in his sleep.
That was a more old-school approach. In our platoon, we just arranged for a room or latrine to be
emptied except for the privates that needed to fix a problem. It was just Ritalin standing 15 feet
away from me in our empty room and a quiet hallway beside us. Rucksacks and duffel bags stood in my
way. I had to beat him to a pulp
for such cowardice. As soon as he
spoke I B-lined it toward him at a high rate of speed, kicking and throwing
everything in my path right at him.
“You
fucking coward! Pussy-ass piece of shit!” I bellowed.
He
was out the door before the first rucksack hit the ground and no, I have no
idea what a “pussy-ass piece of shit” is, but that’s what naturally came out
during my temper tantrum. I’m
actually glad I didn’t get the chance to cave his face in, because he most
likely would have tattled. Ritalin
hid from me until he could request to change rooms from a drill. My platoon approved of all my actions
and Ritalin was ignored for the remainder of our 16-weeks of training. Even the drills knew what had happened
and ignored my attack. In that
moment I had to take a relationship with a friend and ask if it was worth
losing rank over. I chose my
friend. Life in the military would
put me in several different situations with these options. JT’s situation was the easiest decision
in 6 ½ years of service.