Feeling Sorry For The Enemy

This is the way our home at 1020 Leigh Ave. looks now.
This is the way our house at 1020 Leigh Ave. looks now.

Leigh Avenue was a working class neighborhood on the edge of the mill section in North Charlotte and a lot of men who lived on that street had fought in World War II.  Dad bought a two-bedroom house there in 1953, when I was 11, after he went broke mining coal in Alabama.

A glider pilot whose family lived across the street, a couple of doors down, didn’t come home. He was killed in France on D-Day.

One of our neighbors, Ernest Cook, a printer at the afternoon newspaper, had been a machine gunner in the Army.   He had been wounded by German solders, and captured, after he had stayed behind to cover a retreat.

Sometimes, in the evenings, some of those men would sit around on lawn chairs, drinking beer, and talking about the war.  I would lay on the grass nearby, in the dark, and listen.  One evening I heard this story, told by a former Marine who had fought in the Pacific.

He said he had always wanted to cut an enemy solder’s throat but he said Japanese solders would not give up. He said they almost always fought to the death, or killed themselves, to avoid capture.

One night, after his unit had beaten back a frontal assault, he said he heard a Japanese soldier moaning in the high grass in front of his foxhole.

This is my chance, he thought.

It was dangerous to crawl out into the grass. Wounded men could still fight, maybe pull the pin on a grenade and kill them both. Japanese solders did that sometimes. But this might be the only chance he would ever get.

The Marine said he found the wounded soldier and was glad to see he wasn’t seriously hurt. He has been shot through a thigh — a flesh wound! It was almost as if he wasn’t hurt at all.

“I pulled my knife, grabbed him by the hair, and started to cut his throat,” the Marine said. “But he was so afraid –he looked so pitiful — I just couldn’t do it. So I shot him.”

Coming Friday: Stay Out Of My Way

Cotton Mouth

We did not eat breakfast on the run when I was growing up in Charlotte in the 1950s. We ate breakfast together, the four of us, Dad, Mother, Brother Dave and me.  [The other five children were grown and gone.]  Supper, too.

Dad remarried in 1949, when I was six years old, a widow from Cullman, Alabama, who had no children. Her name was Vergie Winn Gunn.  Her first husband was a farmer.  She told me he was hitching a horse to a wagon when the horse kicked him in the head. Killed him.  Anyway, back to the story…

Vergie Winn Stith
Vergie Winn Stith

At breakfast my second mother would put a paper napkin and glass of water beside each plate. Usually she cooked eggs, bacon or sausage, grits, toast or, sometimes, made-from-scratch biscuits. Preserves were on the table. A small glass of orange juice, too. And coffee or hot chocolate.

She was a good cook and she set a nice table.

On this particular morning she served Dave and me hot, homemade biscuits. I didn’t realize what day it was until I took a bite — into a cotton ball she had cook inside the biscuit.

“April Fool!” she said.

NOTE: Viking, Iceman, Nine! and I lost the John Muir Trail lottery. For 42 consecutive days I got an email saying “DENIED.”  So we won’t be hiking the JMT this summer.  But Viking and I and, maybe, Iceman are going to hike a 103-mile section of the A.T. in Virginia in May.  And next year, the JMT!  I live in hope.

Coming Monday: No [Black] Girls Allowed