It may have
been on this particular “road march,” or another like it that the rain began.
And “we’re not talking” some average little Florida downpour, (which starts and
ends almost before it began.) No, this was a real “frog choker.” This drencher to
end all drenchers began shortly after our National Guard unit left the armory,
and continued as our twenty or more jeeps, blazers, and deuce and a halves
pulled into the main gate at the Avon Park Bombing Range.
As we rolled
into our field area, it was like the first paragraph from that old volume,
“Jane Eyre.”
There was no possibility of taking a walk that day. We had
been wandering, indeed, in the leafless shrubbery an hour in the morning; but
since dinner (Mrs. Reed, when there was no company, dined early) the cold
winter wind had brought with it clouds so somber, and a rain so penetrating, that further out-door exercise was now
out of the question.
And
similarly, like Jane Eyre, I was glad of it.
I was fine with retreating to a
window seat; (well, not exactly a window seat.) As I recall, six of us,
including yours truly, retreated to the driest available location; a cargo
trailer. Apparently, there was very little cargo in it, or if so, only a small
tent and poles lay on the floor.
And so we
found ourselves “snug as a bug in a rug,” and quite filling up the drop down
benches which lined each side of the trailer, while the rain continued its unmerciful
deluge round about us. Thankfully, the green canvass which lined the wooden
structure was “high and dry,” and no leak intruded on our revelry.
My military
friends and I spent the next couple of hours talking about a myriad of
miscellaneous and sundry things; none of which I remember now. But strangely
enough, (to me, at least) as I write these words, it is with tears I remember
that day.
It was a
personally singular day that came and went, and will never return. But, for
whatever reason, it is indelibly etched into my memory.
And I can
only wonder if anyone else who sat in that little cargo trailer that day
recalls that little interlude which served to postpone our Uncle Sam’s agenda;
if only for a little while.
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