I don’t mind telling you I still have dreams or flashes at night
time when I’m in bed. I don’t want to get in, but it is sort of
a war story. It was the first time that I was on a patrol,
fighting patrol that we encountered the enemy. And so we were
going up this hill, Hill 156. I remember that and I guess we
got about two thirds of the way up, half or two thirds. I’m not
sure. It’s hard to say at night time. But it was a beautiful
night. They could hear us coming across the valley probably
half a mile away everything was so dry. Crack underneath your
feet. You know the reeds and rice paddies and that. So anyway
we’re going up then all heck broke loose. And of course after
throwing grenades and that there was none of our fellows opened
up with a weapon even though I was carrying a Bren gun with its
sling and that. So everybody started throwing grenades in the
area where this air fire was coming from and then Mr. Martin,
Scotty Martin he was a lieutenant. He gave the order to pull
back. So anyway same time, and this is a true story, dirt
started flicking up around. I don’t know if it was... I know
there was a patrol that was moving down the valley too and there
was a hill behind us. So I don’t know if that’s where the
rounds are. Anyway I hit the ground with the big Bren gun and I
rolled and anyway when I came up this guy was right in front of
me and it was such a beautiful night. He says, “That you
Chuck?” just like that. I said, this is my friend Gus Pender.
He was a platoon signaller. He was a corporal. And so anyway I
went to pick up my gun, the Bren gun and here it was in two
pieces hanging down the side. I hit the barrel locking nut when
I rolled. If there had have been somebody in front of me that
would have been it. I had no, my weapon was obsolete. So I was
able to get everything together and then all of a sudden him and
I had to dive under a ledge and the rest of the patrol pulled
back and here we are up on the hill. And they were on top of
this ledge and they were firing down and they were, you know, in
Korean and everything. And so anyway we waited and waited and
we heard the voices going around. We peaked. We got around and
peaked around the ledge. There was nothing there, but we didn’t
want to just take off because it was too bright. And, cause he
got in touch with the company commander and he in turn switched
us over on another channel, said switch to another channel which
was the armoured corps. And the commander of the armoured corps
he knew approximately where we were when we told him and he
said, “As soon as the rounds start hitting,” he said, “run like
hell and get the heck down out of it.” So anyway we got down.
Now as I say we had three wounded and one killed that night.
When I have, I wake up, but I can never get away from the enemy.
Like you know no matter how much you try that’s when you wake
up. You finally, you know, you come out of it. Sometimes I
make a big jump like or I might yell. My wife says, “Are you
having that again?” type thing. I say, “Yeah.”