Chapter 6

Monday, 4 June
Clark AB

A monkey-wood sign hung over the Officers’ Club main entrance. The sign pointed to pizza at the left and rathskeller to the right; muffled yelling and whistles came from the right. Bruce, Catman, and Robin turned toward the Rathskeller.

As they approached the door, Bruce heard methodic banging and thuds coming from inside. He cautiously opened the door.…

… and instantly pulled back as a beer bottled whizzed past his head. A female laughed, then shrieked as two men plopped her on top of a table. Music blared from speakers set throughout the room; not new music, but really old, solid rock classics, the type of songs that had been popular before Bruce was even born: Van Halen, 38 Special, Rush, Boston. It marked a fighter pilot hangout, keeping with the hard-driving songs.

They eased themselves into the room and made sure the door was closed behind them. There was little cigarette smoke in the air. In front of them a group of fighter pilots gulped “afterburners”—flaming concoctions of Wild Turkey and crème de menthe, ignited with a match.

Besides the girl on the table, two scantily clad females gyrated at the front of the room on a small stage. They wore cowboy attire — chaps, a frilly shoulder throw, and cowboy hats — but that’s where the resemblance to cowgirls stopped. Black bikinis made up the rest of the Western outfit.

A long bar ran across the opposite wall, with four bartenders keeping busy filling pitchers of beer and mixing “afterburners.”

Catman shouted into Bruce’s ear over the music, “I feel right at home! We could still be at Luke, if I didn’t know better!”

Bruce nodded tightly as he surveyed the place. Yeah, he thought, back at Luke. The sudden memory of Ashley raced through his head. She was behind the bar, her golden hair flying as she poured the drinks; her job as a bartender pulled in that extra money so they could jet off to Aruba, Mazatlan, or some other exotic place for an extended weekend. Bruce’s hours were always changing, and at first her job had given them a chance to be together during the days when he didn’t have to fly.

It had seemed perfect back then, and it was a real kick to watch the face of a senior officer’s wife when she learned that Mrs. Bruce Steele not only didn’t belong to the Officers’ Wives’ Club but was a bartender as well.

Robin waved them over to a table. Commandeering a waiter, he shouted over the noise, “San Miguel?”

“You got it.” Bruce and Catman elbowed their way through the crowd.

* * *

Catman stacked another beer bottle on top of the pyramid growing in the center of the table. Charlie had joined them but didn’t say a word.

Bruce sipped his beer. The alcohol gave him back that nice warm glow. He knew that tomorrow morning his head would ache, his breath would smell, and he’d be passing gas like crazy, but at least he felt good now.

He looked at Charlie and said, “Seems there’s never enough time for the simple things in life, anymore. Things are moving too fast, changing all the time.” He looked wistful. “Even finding a girl who believes in relaxing — you know, stuff like holding hands, going for walks. Simple things, just spending time together.”

Charlie stared into his drink.

Bruce took another pull on his beer. “I remember when Ashley and I were first married — just out of the Academy, roaring through Texas to Del Rio for pilot training. We didn’t have much money then. She didn’t have a job and man, were we stretching the paycheck. Even buying a malt was a big decision. We used pillowcases stuffed with laundry until we could scrape enough money together to buy a pillow.” Bruce glanced at Charlie. His backseater still had his head down.

“Hey, you s’all right?” Bruce gave his backseater a playful push. Damn, Charlie was a nice guy.

Charlie looked up and smiled slightly. “I’m fine,” he whispered.

Bruce nodded. “Great. You know, sometimes I wished there’d be more simple things like that in life to enjoy. After leaving Del Rio, Ashley and I never had the time — maybe that’s why things didn’t work out.” He gripped his bottle tightly and blinked. The events of the day seemed to be catching up with him, welling up his emotions.…

Charlie said quietly, “Does she still mean something to you?”

Bruce shook his head, scared to say anything, afraid that his voice would crack. How can losing your wife not affect you? If it had been anything he had done, something that he could have changed to make her stay … but it had been totally out of his control. And especially with what she had done …

Bruce wiped his eye with the back of his hand. He spoke in a low voice. “She would never go for a walk. She was always into keeping busy, buying the fastest car, eating the most expensive food. I guess I never thought that her working as a bartender would hurt — you know, bringing in the extra money and all. It … it probably doesn’t explain what she did.…” His voice trailed off.

Charlie leaned against the bar. “What about your dad? Does he still mean something to you?”

Bruce finished his beer without answering. Things were starting to get hazy. He’d had plenty to drink, and if he didn’t get a handle on things he’d be crying in his beer all night.

Charlie persisted. “Well, are you going to see him?”

“Someday. Sure, why not. Hell, he’s stationed at Subic. We were only five minutes away when we were flying this morning, Charlie. Maybe I’ll get down there after Survival School.”

A voice interrupted him. “Excuse me.”

Two men in flight suits slid in next to the bar. One came very close to pushing Bruce out of his seat; the other plopped down on a free stool.

Bruce opened his mouth to retort when he saw the patch on the men’s shoulders. “Rotorheads! You guys in Rescue?”

“That’s a rog.”

Bruce leaned over to shake their hands. “How ya’ll doing? I’m Bruce Steele, and this chucklehead is Charlie Fargassa. Assassin and Foggy.” The helicopter pilots returned the handshakes.

“Richard Head.”

“Bob Gould.”

Bruce stood, wavered slightly, then offered Head his stool. “Go ahead. I’ve been sitting all night. You guys want a drink?”

“Sure.”

Bruce motioned with his hands to the bartender. “Hey, include these gentlemen with the round.” The presence of the chopper pilots brightened Bruce’s mood, pulling him out of his funk. “So how long have you been here?”

Gould leaned back against the bar. “Oh, about two minutes.”

“What the captain meant to say,” interrupted Head, “is that he just arrived here on Clark. I’ve been here two years and have two left.”

“Your family is with you?” asked Charlie.

“Locked up safe and tight up on Thirty-First Place.” At Charlie’s puzzled look, Head explained, “You guys must be brand-new, too. That’s on-base officer’s housing. Since you’re new, you’ll be staying off-base at one of the American compounds. And if you’re bachelors, you’ll probably be there your entire tour. That’s one nice thing about coming to Clark without a family — you’ll rotate back to the States faster.”

At a nudge, Bruce looked up. Catman and Robin had crowded in next to him.

The beers arrived; the first two went to the helicopter pilots.

Bruce drew on his, finishing half the bottle. He smacked his lips and pointed to the two chopper pilots. “Gentlemen, meet Richard Head and Bob Gould — Rotorheads, Esquire.”

“Well, I’ll crap a brick. Howdy, guys. I’m Catman.”

“Robin.”

The four fighter jocks surrounded the chopper pilots, buying them drinks, laughing at their jokes, and in general doing everything they could to make them feel welcome. They all knew that their lives might one day depend on the helicopters that these men flew.

Angeles City, P.I.

Cervante stood across the street from the Skyline Hotel and pulled on his cigarette. He watched a long van drive up to the front and stop. Men and women spilled out of the van, laughing, all dressed in uniforms. He tensed when he first spotted the people, but as they came into view he recognized the uniforms of commercial airline employees.

The flight crew was spending the night in the hotel while their plane was serviced. The planes were contract carriers, on lease by the United States government to ferry the military personnel from the States to the P.I. The military owned vast fleets of its own airplanes, the giant C-5s and smaller C-17s that dotted the tarmac on Clark, yet in Cervante’s eyes the Americans flaunted their superiority, thinking that their people were too good to be transported on those war machines. It was just another itch that made the entire American presence unbearable.

A human sea washed around Cervante as he waited for Pompano Sicat. It was getting dark, and in a few moments he would be unable to distinguish one face from another. Most of the Filipino men were dressed in identical white shirts and dark pants. In their school days, the school’s uniform-of-the-day was the unchanging white on black.

Cervante had dressed the same way, in order to blend into the crowd. His avant-garde friends at the University of the Philippines would be dumbfounded if they saw him now. But then again, they’d be amazed that anyone would actually do something and take action against the Americans; his friends were long on talk, but pretty damned short on changing things.

He threw down his cigarette, then glanced at his watch. Pompano was late. Not by much, but it still irritated Cervante. Kawnlo would never put up with this: time was much too valuable.

Finally a jeepney pulled up to the curve. A crowd of people rushed off the vehicle.

Cervante saw Pompano slowly step down from the corrugated metal floor onto the pavement. The man looked around, spotted Cervante and started walking down the street. Cervante stepped in behind him, then moved abreast of him. People pushed past them, but they were close enough to speak without being overheard. Pompano spoke first.

“So, my friend. What is it that you bring?”

“A plan.” Cervante touched Pompano’s arm, pointing to a dark street plunging away from the main avenue. When they turned the corner they found themselves walking along a row of quiet houses. The city’s roar was still discernible in the background, but the abodes seemed like a quiet oasis amid the fast-paced downtown life. There were many such pockets scattered throughout Angeles, further enforcing Cervante’s perception that the city was a two-dimensional façade, set up mostly for the benefit of the Americans. It lacked the depth, the rich history of other Filipino cities.

They walked next to walls covered with broken glass to prevent burglars and vandals from entering. Pompano reached in his pocket and pulled out a pack of cigarettes. He offered one to Cervante.

Cervante noticed the official blue-seal emblem that covered a portion of the top of the pack. He shook his head and pulled out one of his own.

“Cervante, you university types take this much too seriously. You want to cut yourself completely off from the Americans? Bah, it will never happen. Everyone is in bed with everyone else, no matter how well you clean house.”

“Supporting their black market only builds up the American presence. The claws are reaching deeper every day, making sure the Americans never leave the P. I. again.”

Pompano nodded. “That may be true, my friend. Yes, I pay twice as much for these American cigarettes as that fine Filipino brand you are smoking; and yes, the American housewife who brings me a hundred cartons she received from her friends is spending my money on their base, and not in the Angeles economy.” He blew a deep breath of smoke out. “But, ah! These cigarettes are from God’s own garden.” He crossed himself as he spoke. “Yes, I want to hasten the Americans out, but if I do not sell our countrymen these Blue Seals, then someone else will.”

Cervante scowled. “I did not come to debate how much better those American cigarettes are than ours. It does not matter. Our cigarettes could taste like caribou shit—”

“And they do.”

“But the point is,” said Cervante, carefully ignoring Pompano’s interruption, “every American item we buy, we sell, we push, or we use is dividing our country and forcing us farther and farther away from complete independence. We almost had it the first time the Americans left. But now, the people are frightened to imagine having no Americans to protect them against China, and the addiction grows worse every day.”

Pompano stopped and puffed for a minute. He spoke quietly. “My friend, you are missing my point. I despise the Americans as much as you.” He narrowed his eyes at Cervante. “And probably even more so, for what they did to me, did to my family. That I can never forgive. But I must face reality. Not as an idealistic student such as yourself, but as a businessman. As a father who must care for his daughter.”

“Yolanda is old enough to take care of herself—”

“Leave Yolanda out of this!” The rebuke came swiftly, strongly. Cervante took an involuntary step backward at the harsh tone. Pompano continued, but lightly.

“The reality I must face is greater than a simple black-and-white decision: if a young person comes into my sari-sari store, I do not question him about buying illegal American cigarettes. For if I do, then he will go to another store, which will probably not only sell him the cigarettes, but set him up with a prostitute as well. It is survival, and an economic necessity. I cannot boycott American goods, just as I cannot boycott Chinese goods.” Pompano spit at the word. “I believe in a separate P.I., but there is reality to deal with.”

Cervante felt himself warming to the debate, but knew that he could not persuade the old man with words. There was a limit to what the tongue could accomplish, and Cervante felt that the line was close. But he had to say one last thing.

“You must remember, Pompano. This is a war we are fighting. Our victories are not measured in battles won. Our measure of success is the day-to-day gain that we Filipinos get from seeing the American presence diminish. That is what we must talk about.”

Cervante took Pompano gently by the elbow and led him down the dark street.

“The raid we accomplished — we performed very well.”

“Of course. You obtained ammunition, rifles.”

“Yes, that and more.” Cervante lowered his voice. “The PC convoy had a new weapon — a high-power microwave device.”

“Microwave?” Pompano snorted. “What do you propose we do with this American microwave? Cook all the meat on their base?”

“A high-power microwave. I have read the manual. And I have looked up the implication of this weapon on the Internet. It is astounding what you can glean from the American press.

“The microwave device is not an end in itself. If we use it, we should be able to force them out quicker.”

“Not an end in itself. Now you are speaking foolishly, Cervante. Of what use is a weapon that will merely frustrate? The ammunition and supplies you have recovered should enable our people to accomplish great things.”

Cervante waved a hand. His cigarette had burned down almost to the filter. He took one last drag before flicking it away. “You do not understand. A small group, a tiny fraction of our manpower, can use this high-power microwave device to disrupt American flight activities. If we can get close enough, the microwaves will disrupt circuitry, causing the flight controls on their aircraft to stop working. They will not even know what is happening!

“Put yourself in the Americans’ position. They are now negotiating with our country a plan to stay at Clark forever. If we can frustrate the Americans in their day-to-day activities, make them know that the Filipinos do not want them here, they will be more likely to leave the P.I. The high-power microwave weapon is one aspect of our campaign to harass them; it will annoy the hell out of them!”

“We will be far enough away from Clark to avoid complete burnout of their electronics, but we will still succeed in disrupting their equipment.”

“Why don’t we simply get a missile and fire it at them, if that is what you want?”

“Because that would give the Americans a target, something tangible to rally around — and may force them to stay. And they will eventually ferret us out. But this high-power microwave weapon … it is just the device that could help make them leave.”

He paused.

“We will acquire a new base camp — a safe house to which we can flee. We are leaving tomorrow. I am in need of another driver. Can I count on your joining us?”

“How long will we be gone?”

“No longer than a week.”

“That is short notice.”

“Invitations are not sent out for revolutions.”

Pompano was silent for a moment. “I will join you.”

Clark AB

Charlie pulled Catman aside. At the bar, Bruce swept up his hands in a fighter pilot’s rendition of an inverted roll. His newfound friends watched in amusement.

Charlie leaned into Catman’s ear, holding him upright.

“What do you guys have planned for tomorrow?”

Catman bleared back at him; his eyes looked nearly as red as his hair. “Rejoin the living.”

“Look: we don’t have to report to the Jungle Survival School until the day after tomorrow. I thought we’d be able to take in some of the sights.”

Catman closed one eye. Now Charlie knew he was drunk. Catman didn’t resort to that maneuver unless he started seeing double.

“Okay, Foggy — what’s up?” The words slurred together. “Going alone has never stopped you before.”

Charlie hesitated. Bruce’s sudden divorce had seemed to bowl his friend over. Whatever had happened between Ashley and him was top-secret material. There had to be something the guys could do to pop the building pressure.

“Okay, swear you never heard this from me — Bruce’s dad is stationed at Subic.”

Catman lifted his eyebrows; his closed eye popped open. “I thought he lived in Texas.”

“He did — with Bruce’s mom. You know that he’s in the Navy?” Catman nodded. “But he was transferred to Subic three months ago; went remote so he could get back home faster, wouldn’t have to have the family move again.”

“Why didn’t Assassin tell anyone?”

Charlie looked pained. “Three months ago?”

Catman frowned, then slowly nodded as the memory of Bruce’s quick divorce hit him. “Oh, yeah.…”

Charlie wet his lips. “Don’t you think it would be a good idea to get Bruce down to Subic tomorrow to see his dad? Before we go through Survival School?”

Catman smiled.

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