Croft stared at the mountainThe inviolate... 258
Croft stared at the mountainThe inviolate elephant brooding over the jungle and the paltry hills
It was pure and remoteIn the late afternoon sunlight it was velvet green and rock blue and the brown of light earth, made of another material than the fetid jungle before it
The old torment burned in him againA stream of wordless impulses beat in his throat and he had again the familiar and inexplicable tension the mountain always furnished him
He had failed, and it hurt him vitallyHis frustration was loose againHe would never have another opportunity to climb itAnd yet he was wondering if he could have succeededOnce more he was feeling the anxiety and terror the mountain had roused on the rock stairwayIf he had gone alone, the fatigue of the other men would not have slowed him but he would not have had their company, and he realized suddenly that he could not have gone without themThe empty hills would have eroded any man's courage
Ha' past seven
She thought she was in heaven
In a few hours they would be back, omega de ville watches pitching their pup tents in the darkness, getting a canteen cup of hot coffee, perhapsAnd tomorrow the endless routine of harsh eventless days would begin once moreAlready the patrol was unfamiliar, unbelievable, and yet the bivouac before them also was unrealIn transit everything in the Army was unrealThey sang to make a little noiseroll me over
And do it again
Croft kept looking at the mountainHe had lost it, had missed some tantalizing revelation of himself
Of himself and much more
Mute Chorus:
ON WHAT WE DO WHEN
WE GET OUT
(Sometimes spoken, usually covert, varying with circumstance
RED: Do the same fuggin thing I always didWhat else is there?
BROWN: When we hit Frisco, I'm going to take my pay and throw the biggest goddam old drunk that town ever saw, and then I'll shack up with some bitch, and I won't do nothing but screw and drink for two whole goddam weeks, and then I'm going to take it easy going home to Kansas, just stopping off whenever I damn feel like it, just throwing the damnedest old chloe binge you ever saw, and then I'm gonna look my wife up, I ain't gonna let her know I'm coming, and I'm going to give her the surprise of her life, and have witnesses along, by God, and I'll throw her out of the house, and let people know the way you treat a bitch when we're stuck over here God knows how long, never knowing when you're going to catch something, just waiting and sweating it out, and finding out things about yourself that, by God, it don't pay to know
GALLAGHER: All I know is there's a fuggin score to be paid off, a score to be paid offThere's somebody gonna pay, knock the fuggin civilians' heads in
GOLDSTEIN: Oh, I can just see it when I get homeI'm going to get back in the early morning, and I'm going to take a taxi from Grand Central, and ride all the way out to our apartment house in Flatbush, and then I'm going to come up the stairs, and ring the bell, and Natalie'll be wondering who it is, and then she's going to come, and she's going to answer it
MARTINEZ: San Antonio, see family maybeWalk around, nice louis vuitton miroir handbags Mexican girls San Antonio, big wad money, ribbons, go to church, kill too many goddam JapsDon't know, re-enlist, Army no goddam good, but Army okay
MINETTA: I'm gonna walk up to every sonofabitch officer in uniform, and say 'Sucker' to them, every one of them right on Broadway, and I'm gonna expose the goddam Army
CROFT: Waste of time thinking about itThe war'll go on for a while
PART FOUR
Wake
THE MOPPING UP was eminently successfulA week after the Toyaku Line had been breached, the remnants of the Japanese garrison on Anopopei had been whittled into a hundred and then a thousand little segmentsTheir organization broke completely; battalions were cut off, and then companies, and finally platoons and squads and little slivers of five and three and two men hid in the jungle, attempted to escape the flood of American patrolsToward the end the casualty figures were unbelievableOn the fifth day two hundred and seventy-eight Japanese were killed and two Americans; on the eighth day, the most productive of the omega seamaster de ville campaign, eight hundred and twenty-one Japanese were killed and nine captured for the loss of three American livesThe communiques went out with a monotonous regularity, terse and modest, not wholly inaccurate
"General MacArthur announced today the official end of the battle for Anopopei
"American troops under Major General Edward Cummings announced capture today of five enemy strong-points and large concentrations of food and ammunitionMopping up is in progress
Astonishing reports continued to come in to Cummings's deskIt was discovered from questioning the few prisoners that for over a month the Japanese had been on half rations, and toward the end there had been almost no food at allA Japanese supply dump had been destroyed by artillery five weeks before, and no one had known itTheir medical facilities had been exhausted, there were portions of the Toyaku Line which had been in disrepair for six or eight weeksFinally they discovered that the Japanese ammunition had been almost depleted a week before the last attack had replica watches rolex be
