The
Boy Inside the Man
Our phone rang
at exactly 3:55 AM. It rang with one of those Dad something bad
has happened rings I hadn't heard in the ten years since our youngest
son said goodbye to teenage angst and hello to twenty-something
aimlessness. Thankfully the aimlessness finally eased as he joined
the Army , found a wife and fathered the most perfect grandchild
in the world.
The second ring snatched me from the world of dead sleep to the
waking world of a worried parent whose youngest son fought a distant
war in the burning sands of Iraq.
"Hey dad, did I wake you up? Sorry about that".”
"It's okay son, always good to hear your voice. You alright"?”
Months of periodic phone conversations punctuated by silence had
conditioned his mother and I both to not ask too many. Not to force
him to say, "I can't tell you that." Or, "We're not
allowed to say". Through that time we had developed our own
unofficial code of non-questions followed by non-answers that told
us little except the most important thing. He was alive and well
for another day.
Silence on the other end of the sat-phone from half a world away.
Silence that filled in more blanks than I wanted filled. He was
calling and that was good. That meant he was alive and healthy enough
to speak. But his brief answer spoke volumes.
"Great dad. I'm doing great. Just wanted to hear your voice.
I don't want mom to worry so tell her everything is fine. I've just
been through a hard few days and wanted to hear you guy's voices".”
Before I could delve deeper into the his definition of great, he
said he had to go and there my wife and I were, lying in our comfortable
bed in our cool house at 4:00 AM while our son stared at a silent
sat-phone in the 130 degree heat of 1:00 PM Iraq.
"Great." I played through my mind all the things that
word could mean. Let's see; large, huge, noble, distinguished, superior.
No. Or perhaps, he meant like when he used to roll his eyes at us
as a teenager and mutter under his breath, "Oh great".”
Three hours later I stared at the morning news over my bowl of
cereal partly wanting to hear the latest word on the war and mostly
not wanting to at all. “A convoy was hit last night in southern
Baghdad leaving two reporters dead.” My parental ears perked
up. Just as our ears always caught the sound of every siren when
our boys started driving I couldn’t help but wonder if our
son was leading that convoy. That was his job after all, convoy
mission commander.
My wife glanced over at me, not wanting to ask. Knowing I would
shake my head and remind her there are over one hundred thousand
soldiers in Iraq and our son was probably nowhere near the bad news
we had just heard about. I glanced back and said nothing. I couldn’t.
All I could hear in my mind was, "Great dad. I'm doing just
great". And then, like all good parents, I knew.
Back on base he called to tell me more. Not much more but enough.
That convoy had been his. The men killed had been his. The danger
and terror had been his. The IED destroyed vehicle had been his.
He had spent six terrifying hours cut off from his convoy, back
to back with a young lieutenant waiting for help that took far too
long coming. He had prepared to die but graciously was spared.
Three weeks later I stood in an airport watching our youngest son.
The boy we thought would never make it out of teenage-hood alive.
The man who had left family and home to defend what he fiercely
believed in. There he stood, hugging his wife and little girl. Still
in his desert camo.
He turned from his family and looked at me. I walked over and we
embraced.
"How you doing son? How does it feel to be home again"?”
For just a moment, Staff Sgt. Joshua George softened. Convoy Commander
and soon to receive the Bronze Star Platoon Sgt. George was just
Josh, our youngest son. He locked eyes with me and breathed deeply
as he pondered my question.
He flashed a familiar grin, the boy still inside the man. "Great
dad. It feels really great"!”
The Boy Inside
the Man first appeared on July 6, 2007 at FaithWriters.com.
It now appears in print in the anthology, Hidden
in the Hymns, available for purchase at Pleasant Word Press.
All Rights
Reserved 2007 - T.E. George |