GRIEF DENIED
"A VIETNAM WIDOW'S STORY"
I am recommending that everyone go visit the web site of Pauline
Laurent. She is a widow of the Vietnam War and has an interesting story to
share. No matter if you fought in the war, or were a peace advocate, out
on some picket line - her story will move you and perhaps inspire you. Her
book is a compelling and insightful look at what the widows of the Vietnam
War endured and went through. This book is highly recommended. Below is a
brief Prologue from her book and web site. You can also order copies of
her book from her web site..
PROLOGUE
It's a beautiful Sunday afternoon
in May - Mother's Day, 1968. Spring in the Midwest is sprouting with life
and possibility. The peonies are shooting stalks through the rich, black
soil in the flower beds. After morning mass at St. Joseph's, I am sitting
in the shade of the big sycamore in Mom's backyard.
My husband, Howard, has been in
Vietnam since March. He thought it would be best for me to stay with my
parents while he was gone. Princess, our black German shepherd, is my
constant companion. She lies at my feet as I glance through the Sunday
paper. I notice wedding announcements, department store sales, ads for
restaurants, and upcoming movies.
Nestled in the back pages of a
remote section of the paper, I spot an article about a battle in Vietnam.
I avoid reading about the war, but this article found me. The action
described in the article involves Howard's unit - 3rd Battalion, 39th
Regiment, 9th Infantry Division.
War Refugees Are Flooding into
Saigon ...The Command Post is in a Buddhist pagoda, 20 yards from a tiny
Catholic church which serves as a medical aid station. "They hit us
hard all last night with mortars and rockets," said Maj. Boone.
"Two soldiers from Alpha Company held out during a three-hour
attack on a little bridge across a feeder canal. I don't even know their
names but they are up for the Silver Star. We've been lucky so far -
only four killed and 14 wounded in the battalion."
Howard is dead. I know it. I
don't know how I know, I just know. I can't breathe. Tears are coming. I'm
trembling inside and out. Mom comes out into the yard and asks,
"What's wrong?"
I show her the article and
whisper, "Howard is dead."
Three days later - May 15, 1968
The potatoes fry in their usual
pool of lard, lard rendered from the hogs my uncles and brothers slaughter
every January. Mom stands over the stove, stirring the potatoes and
turning the blood sausage frying in an adjacent skillet.
Princess greets me after I return
from my job at Scott Air Force Base. My father sits in his favorite chair,
watching the evening news and waiting for dinner to be served.
Something draws me to the front
windows. An ugly green sedan with the words "U.S. Army" printed
on the side of the door is parked in front of the house. Two men in
uniform sit inside the car, looking down at the paperwork on their laps.
The room starts spinning, my
hearing becomes muffled, reality is slipping away from me. Princess barks
as Mom walks to the front window to see what's causing the commotion.
They're coming to tell me he is
dead.
"Please God, let him be
wounded, not dead," I say.
The men continue to sit in the
car. Hours seem to pass before they get out, straighten their uniforms,
and head toward my door. I put Princess in the basement - she doesn't
welcome strangers. I come back to open the door and see two men standing
before me with the same terror in their eyes that I'm feeling inside of
me.
"Good evening," they
say, as they remove their hats. "We're looking for Pauline Querry."
"That's me."
They look at my protruding
abdomen which holds my unborn child, and then look at each other in
silence that lingers too long.
"Was he wounded or killed?
How bad is it?"
More silence. Finally they begin.
"We regret to inform you
that your husband, Sergeant Howard E. Querry, was fatally wounded on the
afternoon of May 10 by a penetrating missile wound to his right
shoulder."
I'm dizzy. I can't think
straight.
"Dead? Is he dead?"
They don't answer me. They just
reread their script as if practicing their lines for a performance they'll
give someday.
"We regret to inform
you..."
The room is spinning. I can't
think, I can't hear anything. I'm going to faint. Alone...I must be alone
to sort this out. Leave me alone.
Instead, I sit politely as they
inform me of the details...funeral... remains... escort... military
cemetery... medals.
Finally they gather their papers
and leave. I politely show them to the door. My parents are hysterical. My
dad weeps, my mom trembles. No sound is coming out - her whole body is
shaking in upheaval.
After retrieving my dog, I
stagger to my room and shut the door. I throw myself on the bed, gasping
for air. My heart races and pounds. My unborn baby starts kicking and
squirming. I hold my dog with one hand, my baby with the other, and I sob.
I'm shattered, blown to pieces. It can't be true.
No medics come, no helicopters
fly me away to an emergency room. I struggle to save myself but I cannot.
I die.
Half an hour later, a ghost of my
former self gets up off the bed and begins planning Howard's funeral.
Mom calls relative. People come
over to console me. I just want to be alone. I just want to be alone.