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Duke selected one of the three-decker bunks. He examined it carefully, prodding it and poking it.

“Hawkeye,” he said, “I think y’all better pour us some prophylactic snake bite medicine. This place is plumb full of snakes.”

“I never argue about snakes with a man from Georgia,” said Hawkeye, extricating a bottle and paper cups from his bag. “I will pour the necessary doses.”

They sat at the wooden table, sipped the Scotch, smoked, and said little but looked happy. They had long hair, could have used shaves, and their clothes were dirty. Between them they owned one-half pair of Captain’s bars, which Hawkeye wore on the back of his fatigue cap.

From the corner, the eager new officers watched them with interest. Finally one of them rose and approached.

“May I ask you gentlemen a question?” he inquired.

“Sure, General,” said Hawkeye, who had turned his fatigue cap around so that the Captain’s bars showed.

“I’m not a general, Captain. I’m a lieutenant. May I ask why you wear your cap that way?”

“What way?”

“Backwards.”

Hawkeye took his cap off and inspected it.

“It looks OK to me,” he said. “Course, I ain’t no West Pointer, and frankly I don’t give a big rat’s ass whether it’s on backwards or forwards. What’s more, when I wear it this way, a lotta people think I’m Yogi Berra.”

“Yogi Berra?” the lieutenant said.

“Hey, Duke,” Hawkeye ordered. “Gimme my mask.”

The lieutenant scuffed his feet and asked, “How long have you gentlemen been in Korea?”

“Eighteen months,” Duke informed him. “Seems like just yesterday we came.”

The lieutenant left and rejoined his group. “They’re nuts,” he told them.

“Jesus,” said one of them, “I hope we don’t look like that after eighteen months.”

“Hawkeye,” Duke said, “y’all hear what that boy said?”

“Yeah.”

“Do y’all attach any significance to it?”

“Not much. We’ve done our jobs. I’m not ashamed of anything. I don’t care what anyone thinks.”

“Me neither,” Duke said, “but y’all don’t suppose we’ve really flipped, do you? Sometimes I’m not sure.”

“Duke, wait’ll you see your wife and those two girls. You’ll be tame, docile and normal as hell. I wouldn’t know you two months from now. Relax.”

“Yeah,” Duke said, pouring another drink, and then raising his voice, “but do y’all know something? This is the first day in eighteen months I ain’t killed nobody.”

“Like hell! You didn’t get one on Christmas.”

“That’s right. I forgot, but y’all know it kind of gets in your blood. Guess I’ll clean my .45 just in case any Chinks infiltrate this here barracks.”

The Duke took out his .45, started to clean it and to look significantly at the new officers in the other corner. He poured another drink. “Hawkeye,” he announced loudly, “those guys are Chinks in disguise, or at least I think they are. Guess I’ll shoot ’em, just to be safe.”

Hawkeye got up, his hat on backwards, and approached the new officers.

“Maybe you guys better cut out for a while,” he suggested. “I only think I’m Yogi Berra, but my buddy has a more serious problem. After four drinks he knows he’s the United States Marines.”

Duke started to sing as he loaded his .45:

From the Halls of Montezuma To the Shores of Okefenokee.

The new officers went through the door rapidly and into the snow. They found the 325th Evacuation Hospital’s Officers’ Club. If they hadn’t been green, they’d have found it sooner. Excitedly, to an enthralled audience that included Brig. General Hamilton Hartington Hammond, the five de­scribed their experiences in the barracks.

“Leave those two alone!” General Hammond thundered, when someone suggested that the Military Police be sum­moned. “For Chrissake, just leave them alone! Just hope that train leaves in the morning with them on it. Assign these men other quarters!”

Ere long, Duke and Hawkeye grew lonesome.

“You scared our friends,” said Hawk. “They left.”

“Yeah,” Duke said, “but that ain’t important. I just don’t believe that y’all are Yogi Berra. I ain’t the United States Marines, either, because I’m Grover Cleveland Alexander. Let’s get that buddy of Trapper John’s who’s stationed here to find us a catcher’s mitt. Then y’all can warm me up at the Officers’ Club.”

“Grover,” Hawkeye said, “I think you got a fast ball like Harriet Beecher Stowe.”

“What’s Trapper’s friend’s name?” Duke said, ignoring him.

“I don’t know,” Hawkeye said. “I think he called him Austin From Boston.”

“Good,” the Duke said. “There can’t be two people named that.”

They finished their drinks and went out into the night. For forty-five minutes they tramped through the snow, traversing the various roadways while, at the top of their voices, they called for Trapper John’s friend.

“Austin From Boston!” they called. “Oh, Austin From Boston! Where are you, Austin From Boston, Trapper John’s friend?”

Their cries, of course, penetrated the Officers’ Club where, at the bar, the five new men clustered now around General Hammond. They were afraid to request an armed escort to accompany them to their new quarters, and they were even more afraid of going out in the snow and dying alone so far from home.

“Goddammit, you men!” General Hammond said finally, tiring of playing mother hen as they pressed closer around him with each plaintive cry. “Why don’t you go to your quarters and get some rest?”

“It must be terrible up there, Sir,” one of the new men said.

“Up where?” General Hammond said, starting to swing his elbows now.

“Up at the front, Sir.”

“Oh, Goddammit,” the General said, giving up. “Do your mothers know you’re over here?”

“Yes, Sir,” they all replied.

Unable to find Trapper John’s friend, who may well have heard their calls and wisely decided against responding, Hawkeye and Duke returned to the barracks where, as soon as they hit their bunks, they fell into sound slumber. Three hours later, Hawkeye was awakened by the Duke, who was fully dressed and fully packed. This had required very little effort, as he had neither undressed nor unpacked.

“Wake up, y’all. We’re goin’ home. That train leaves at seven.”

“What time is it now?”

“Four.”

“Jesus, are you out of your mind? I wanna sleep.”

“Y’all can’t sleep. I think we both got snakebit during the night. Have some medicine.”

He handed Hawkeye a shot of Scotch and a lighted ciga­rette. While Hawkeye immunized himself, Duke filled a flask.

“The mess hall starts servin’ at four-thirty,” he announced. “We gotta eat hearty.”

As soon as the mess hall opened, Duke and Hawkeye entered with barracks bags and proceeded to eat heartily. Over a cup of coffee, Hawkeye reached into a seldom used pocket for a fresh pack of cigarettes. With the cigarettes came a small piece of paper. On it was written, in the unmistakable hand of Trapper John Mclntyre, the unmistak­able poetry of Bret Harte:

Which I wish to remark,And my language is plain,That for ways that are darkAnd for tricks that are vain,The heathen Chinee is peculiar,Which the same I would rise to explain.

And then: “It’s a small place, and now I love it less. If the heathen Chinee should get lucky, just remember your old Dad, and know that he wouldn’t have missed it for the world.”

Hawkeye handed the note to Duke who read it and took out his flask. They drank reverently and headed for the nearby train.

The train ride to Pusan was a full twelve-hour journey. The two Swampmen slept for the first six hours; then Hawkeye read while Duke gazed out the window. At one point a sergeant of the Military Police, patrolling the aisle, requested politely that Hawkeye remove his captain’s bars from the back of his fatigue cap and pin them on the front and Hawkeye, to his own surprise, politely acceded.