(Part of Chapter Five, in "Where the Birds Don't Sing"
Tommy the Coke Man
We all had jungle camouflage fatigues--- along with boots that were specially made for this kind of terrain and weather. We got old newspapers from back in the states [but as I said they were way out dated by the time we got them] along with the 'Stars and the Strips' [the military version of a large newspaper that was sent out to all military unites wherever US Armed Forces were]; from all sides of the world Vietnam was much in the news; yet after being in this country a while I realized people back home were given only light sketches of reality of the soldier in Vietnam [such as would be the bombing of the tri-ammo dumps here in Cam Ranh Bay].
Tommy, a Specialist Five, like a Sergeant, worked for the mess hall. Like me, he often just wore t-shirts, and was in the base camp most of the time. He was a large man, we both tall and wide. Not as strong looking as the Crusher in the company [a person I'd get in a fight with], but none-the-less, no one to want to mess with if you didn't have to. About 230-lbs, 5'll. In any case, he used to sell pop [soda] to us—GI's [soldiers] at the 611th Ordnance Company. He was one of the few who had a refrigerator [although I acquire one about four months prior to my leaving, and often the electricity would go out leaving the pop warm anyways, no
He didn't wear a hat for the most part [as I most of the time did], no hat in this region, in this region of the world that is, could be fatal. Yet, and I say yet, lightly--if I was to call him odd, meaning, a bit eccentric in my world, then I'd just as well have to call myself odd, for I was on such a cutting edge if there is one. I suppose [if someone was to give me a nick name it might have been 'Trigger-happy'] my trigger-happy hand, was considered in such a class, everyone told me about my oddity, I was too paranoid.
See Dennis' web site: http://dennissiluk.tripod.com