Written by Kevin Schmitt
The Gulf Of Thailand promised
many things around 0300 hours on the morning of the 6th.
Heavy fog, flat water and a diversionary tactic in the form of a
trawler that was supposed to report to new
management that
it was taking on water. Of course the Naval arm of The
People’s Republic of Vietnam might
not give a shit about that, but somebody somewhere liked the idea so
the plan was floated.
Lt. Junior Grade Herb
Greenwood was a bit curious about that end of the operation when he
first heard about it. It seemed like every boat along the coast was
either being used to transport refugees or else they were being
guarded so that they couldn’t
be used for
that purpose. The N.V.A. was taking over and a lot of people felt
that their neighborhood was about to go to hell.
Greenwood’s best theory was
that the U.S. Navy simply grabbed one of those refugee boats, took
custody of the very fortunate passengers, and then offered the
skipper a small fortune to head back to home waters and pretend that
his boat was in trouble. That skipper would have to be a tad
desperate, and a whole lot less important than the fellows who were
supposed to benefit from the diversionary tactic.
Greenwood stopped thinking
about that when it was time to move in. Because this was a special
op, he was given command of a Mark-V
Picket boat
that he had never seen until a couple of hours before it was time to
move out. The river patrol boat was forty-five feet long and nine
feet abeam. It was a variant of the boat he had skippered as part of
the Mobile
Ravine force
that had operated so extensively throughout the delta portion of the
country.
That was back in 67
when there
was still some hope of bleeding the communists white. Now it was May
of 75 and
Operation
Frequent Wind was
still being talked about with no lack of disgust. Maybe that’s the
reason they didn’t have to twist his arm to get him to lead the
team. His wife was Vietnamese, and she would have to wait many years
before she would be able to return as a tourist,
and make
contact with the loved ones that hopefully would still be alive.
Her name was Nhu
which means
gentle. She
and Herb made an interesting couple. She was a real beauty with light
colored skin and a small bone structure. Herb on the other hand was a
real Red
Skin. In
part because he was always out in the hot Southeast Asian sun. Also
in part because he was a Paiute
Indian,
born and raised just a stone’s throw from Las Vegas Nevada. On
their first date Herb introduced Nhu to the wonderful world of cards,
and in no time the young woman was hooked. Their plan was to buy a
house in Las Vegas and she would get a job as a dealer in one of the
casinos until Herb could collect his pension and then hopefully get a
job teaching math. That was the plan, and it would enable his wife to
find happiness thousands of miles from a homeland that was now being
turned into a Vietnamese holocaust.
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