Chase hesitated, then nodded, dreading the game that they often used to loosen his tongue. He frequently exposed more of himself in his answers than he wished to reveal. And Fauvel did not play the game according to established rules, but with a swift and vicious directness that cut to the heart of the matter. Nevertheless, Chase said, "Go on."
Fauvel said, "Mother."
"Dead."
"Father."
"Dead."
Fauvel steepled his fingers as if he were a child playing the see-the-church game. "Love."
"Woman."
"Love."
"Woman," Chase repeated.
Fauvel did not look at him but stared studiously at the blue glass terrier on the bookshelf nearest him. "Don't repeat yourself, please."
Chase apologized, aware that it was expected. The first time that Fauvel had expected an apology in these circumstances, Chase had been surprised. They were therapist and patient, after all, and it seemed odd for the therapist to foster a dependent relationship in which the patient was encouraged to feel guilty for evasive answers. Session by session, however, he was less surprised at anything that Fauvel might suggest.
The doctor again said, "Love."
"Woman."
"Love. "
"Woman."
"I asked you not to repeat yourself."
"I'm not a latent homosexual, if that's what you're after."
Fauvel said, "But the simple 'woman' is an evasion."
"Everything is an evasion."
That observation appeared to surprise the doctor, but not enough to jar him out of the stubborn, wearying routine that he had begun. "Yes, everything is an evasion. But in this case it's an egregious evasion, because there is no woman. You won't allow one into your life. So, more honesty, if you will. Love."
Already Chase was perspiring, and he did not know why.
"Love," Fauvel insisted.
"Is a many splendored thing."
"Unacceptable childishness."
"Sorry."
"Love."
Chase finally said, "Myself."
"But that's a lie, isn't it?"
"Yes."
"Because you don't love yourself "
"No."
"Very good," Fauvel said. Now the interchange of words went faster, one barked close after the other, as if speed counted in the scoring. Fauvel said, "Hate."
"You."
"Funny."
"Thanks."
"Hate."
"Self-destructive."
"Another evasion. Hate."
"Army."
"Hate."
"Vietnam."
"Hate."
"Guns."
"Hate."
"Zacharia," Chase said, although he had often sworn never to mention that name again or to remember the man attached to it or, indeed, to recall the events that the man had perpetrated.
"Hate," Fauvel persisted.
"Another word, please."
"No. Hate."
"Lieutenant Zacharia."
"It goes deeper than Zacharia."
"I know."
"Hate."
"Me," Chase said.
"And that's the truth, isn't it?"
"Yes." After a silence, the doctor said, "Okay, let's back up from you to Zacharia. Do you remember what Lieutenant Zacharia ordered you to do, Benjamin?"
"Yes, sir."
"What were those orders?"
"We'd sealed off two back entrances to a Cong tunnel system."
"And?"
"Lieutenant Zacharia ordered me to clear the last entrance."
"How did you accomplish that?"
"With a grenade, sir."
"And?"
"And then before the air around the tunnel face could clear, I went forward."
"And?"
"And used a machine gun."
"Good."
"Not so good, sir."
"Good that you can at least talk about it."
Chase was silent.
"What happened then, Benjamin?"
"Then we went down, sir."
"We?"
"Lieutenant Zacharia, Sergeant Coombs, Privates Halsey and Wade, a couple of other men."
"And you."
"Yeah. Me."
"Then?"
"In the tunnel, we found four dead men and parts of men lying in the foyer of the complex. Lieutenant Zacharia ordered a cautious advance. A hundred fifty yards along, we came to a bamboo gate."
"Blocking the way.
"Yeah. Villagers behind it."
"Tell me about the villagers."
"Mostly women."
"How many women, Ben?"
"Maybe twenty."
"Children?" Fauvel asked.
Silence was a refuge.
"Were there children?"
Chase sank down in the heavy padding of the armchair, shoulders drawn up as if he wished to hide between them. "A few."
"They were imprisoned there?"
"No. The bamboo was an obstacle. The Cong tunnels ran a lot deeper than that, a lot farther. We hadn't even reached the weapons cache. The villagers were assisting the Vietcong, collaborating with them, obstructing us."
"Do you think they were forced to obstruct you, forced by the Vietcong… or were they willing agents of the enemy?"
Chase was silent.
"I'm waiting for an answer," Fauvel said sternly.
Chase didn't reply.
"You are waiting for an answer," Fauvel told him, "whether you realize it or not. Were these villagers being forced to obstruct your advance, forced at gunpoint by the Cong in the tunnels behind them, or were they there at their own choice?"
"Hard to say."
"Is it?"
"Hard for me, anyway."
"In those situations you could never be sure."
"Right."
"They might have been collaborationists — or they might have been innocent."
"Right."
"Okay. Then what happened?"
"We tried to open the gate, but the women were holding it shut with a system of ropes."
"Women."
"They used women as a shield. Or sometimes the women were the worst killers of all, cut you down with a smile."
"So you ordered them out of the way?" Fauvel asked.
"They wouldn't move. The lieutenant said it might be a trap designed to contain us at that point, delay us long enough for the Cong to somehow get behind us."
"Could that have been true?"
"Could have been."
"Likely?"
"Yes."
"Go on."
"It was dark. There was a smell in that tunnel I can't explain, made up of sweat and urine and rotting vegetables, as heavy as if it had substance. Lieutenant Zacharia ordered us to open fire and clear the way."
"Did you comply?"
Chase was silent.
"Did you comply?"
"Not immediately."
"But eventually?"
"The stench… the darkness…"
"You complied."
"So claustrophobic down there, Cong probably coming around behind us through a secret tunnel."
"So you complied with the order?"
"Yes."
"You personally — or the squad?"
"The squad and me. Everyone did."
"You shot them."
"Cleared the way."
"Shot them."
"We could have died there."
"Shot them."
"Yeah."
Fauvel gave him a rest. Half a minute. Then: "Later, when the tunnel had been cleared, searched, the weapons cache destroyed, then you ran into the ambush that earned you the Medal of Honor."
"Yes. That was above ground."
Fauvel said, "You crawled across the field of fire for nearly two hundred yards and brought back a wounded sergeant named Coombs."
"Samuel Coombs."
"You received two minor but painful wounds in the thigh and calf of your right leg, but you didn't stop crawling until you had reached shelter. Then you secured Coombs behind a stand of scrub, and having reached a point on the enemy's flank by means of your heroic crossing of the open field — what happened?"
"I killed some of the bastards."
"Enemy soldiers."
"Yeah."
"How many?"
"Eighteen."
"Eighteen Vietcong soldiers?"
"Yeah."
"So you not only saved Sergeant Coombs's life but contributed substantially to the well-being of your entire unit." He had only slightly paraphrased the wording on the scroll that Chase had received in the mail from the president himself.