Nothing Earth Shattering

By Brian O’Hare

1.

She thought about him at the oddest times; the thoughts vaguely embarrassing, as if revealing her to be a fraud —something other than a good wife and mother. She considered herself a practical woman, and by her sober estimation the memories served no purpose. They were, in fact, counter-productive to the already complex task of simply living her life. Yet, as much as she tried, she was powerless to control them. That was the maddening part —their unpredictability. When they were upon her, a kind of déjà vu took hold, leaving her unsettled and lost. Like the time two summers ago, on a family trip to Nags Head, when memories of a long ago beach welled up from the bright sand like a guilty confession, leaving her dizzy and lightheaded in the Carolina sun, as her family chattered about her, oblivious. Or while watching TV, when those Marine Corps ads came on, where the Marine pulls the sword from a stone like a young knight, her memories would crackle to life like the lightning filling the sky in the commercial and she’d bite her lip to keep the tears from revealing her. And last fall, when the Piedmont Gas man lit the pilot light in the floor furnace of their house, the masculine tang of Old Spice and clean sweat lingered long after he’d left, and she sat in the creeping autumn dusk savoring the scent until the smell of burning dust gradually overcame the memory.

She hated the power these memories had over her, hated the way they made her feel. But her feelings —if they could be called that —were fleeting, vanishing into nothingness like the pilot light suddenly smothered. If she were being honest, she couldn’t even remember what he looked like. Sort of pleasant and blonde with a nice smile, if she had to guess. She hadn’t known him too well. That was a long time ago, she’d tell herself. She was forty-two now. Three kids, almost grown. A decent enough husband. A nice enough life.

 

2.

Lance Corporal Larsen hadn’t meant to blow himself up. In fact, Larsen was having the time of his life; living the grand adventure of war. He fantasized about his unborn children and the stories he’d tell them. Of how the old man helped take out ‘The Dictator’, a family epic for a family that didn’t yet exist. There wasn’t even a girlfriend, just a girl from back home he’d flown out to Hawaii for the Marine Corps Birthday Ball the November before they deployed.

Larsen, by all accounts, had the world by the ass. Thirty days paid leave. Full medical and dental. Three squares a day, as his old man always said.  And if he ever got time, classes toward his Associate’s at the Camp Hansen branch of Central Texas College in Okinawa (Go Eagles!). He had what any nineteen-year-old, especially a recent graduate of West Bladen High, would consider a lot of money, directly deposited— minus an allotment for his mom— every two weeks, whether his days were spent pitching quarters and drinking MGD in the barracks or taking on Saddam’s Republican Guard. It was all the same to the Marine Corps. Sure beat the shit outta wiping down the soup and potato bar at the Golden Corral.

Before dawn on the day the ground war kicked off, Larsen stepped into the breach, nervous and excited. Though displaying an outward cockiness (they were Marines!), Larsen secretly worried about a chemical attack. But Gunner McKee had put on an Oscar worthy performance the night before, making the men laugh with his dirty jokes, coolly telling them they had nothing to worry about, that they’d be remembered as long as there was a United States of America. Oooh-rah! they’d barked at Gunner McKee. And Gunner McKee hoped he was right.

 

3.

Turned out Gunner McKee was only mostly right; Larsen was the only casualty that day.

Word spread from Larsen’s squad to the platoon, to the company, and then on to battalion. The Marine Corps would send someone to his mom’s place outside Raleigh, right? Or was it Rocky Mount? She moved around a lot. His dad? Well, he’d find out somehow.

The others, the Corporals and the Sergeants in the battalion, wondered how the hell Larsen’s NCOs let him get away with hanging grenades from his flak jacket by their pins.

“Kids…” they said, though they were only four or five years older.

 

4.

To Captain “Bedlam” Bednarski, Weapons Company CO, it was Darwinism, pure and simple: “Life is tough; tougher if you’re stupid.”

 

5.

But “Mad Mike” Madigan —Larsen’s battalion commander —was pissed. Some pansy journalist from Esquire had attached himself “like a deer tick on dog balls” to Larsen’s platoon when it happened; probably put Larsen on the cover, make him into some big goddamn hero. Cost Mad Mike his promotion to bird colonel and his regiment too.

As he simmered, Mad Mike drained a warm can of Coke, fortified with Wild Turkey, courtesy of the guys who ran the AT&T tent back at Manifa. Through a blackened hole in the glass departure lounge window, Mad Mike watched Marines posing for pictures in front of a wasted jumbo jet, their hands upraised in “devil’s horns,” saluting the chaos they’d wrought. Silently, he vowed to hang Larsen’s platoon commander’s balls from the rear view of his pick-up for fucking him. Mad Mike turned up the Wagner on his Walkman, and tossed the empty can onto the runway below.

“Cocksucker.”

 

6.

Pham, his face stung and red by the shrapnel, said he tripped. The grenade went one way. The spoon another. The pin stayed put. Heard him say “Oh shit.” They hit the deck. That was it.

“Oh shit!” They laughed —not even bothering to look over their shoulders.

 

7.

Corporal Rowley, a wrench turner from Motor T, volunteered to help with the mess that was Larsen, more out of curiosity than anything else. He’d never seen a dead body before and felt that by a certain point in a man’s life, a real man needed to see such things. A bucket-list item, if you will. (Not that Larsen was much of a dead body.)          Rowley held the bag for Harris, a dark green from Supply. They looked for dog tags. Teeth. Bone fragments. Whatever. Afterward, they went through Larsen’s personal gear. Found the usual stuff: a well-used Victoria’s Secret catalog, a fun size Butterfinger bar that fell apart in Rowley’s hands as he broke it in half, and three blurry snapshots: a dog panting happily in a red dirt backyard, a pale girl on Waikiki beach, Diamond Head looming and eternal behind her. The same girl, now wearing what looked like a prom dress, with Larsen at the Birthday Ball. Bootleg cassettes bought from Mama-san who ran the store outside Gate One at Hansen: Guns N’ Roses, Metallica, a mix tape labeled

“For Jennifer” in ballpoint pen. Nothing earth shattering.

 

8.

She’d heard the song in passing through a car window as she cut across the

Hardee’s parking lot on her way to work: Tears for Fears’ Everybody Wants To Rule the World. She startled. Stopped in the middle of the lot. Her legs wobbled slightly, like the waves of heat rising from the asphalt, lured by the music to a car Larsen had borrowed for the weekend, the song playing on a small boom box that sat on the frayed backseat because the car’s cassette player had been stolen. A gentle silence hung between them, sparkling and soft in the late afternoon light.

The music faded as the car left the Hardee’s lot. She took a deep breath and looked to see if anyone had noticed. There was no one. She got her bearings and headed into the white light of the sun. After all, she was a practical woman.


Brian O’Hare is a former U.S. Marine Corps captain and disabled combat veteran. He’s a former Editor-at-Large for MovieMaker magazine and an award-winning documentary filmmaker. Brian’s fiction has appeared in War, Literature and the Arts, Liar’s League, London, The Dead Mule School for Southern Literature and Fresh.ink. He currently lives in Los Angeles, and you can follow him on Instagram under the handle @bohare13x. This piece was originally published in War, Literature & the Arts Vol. 30 in 2018.

Previous
Previous

Empty Desks

Next
Next

On Seeking Joy in a Vacuum