STORY "Forrest Gump" - Chapter Five
Danger
in the Jungle
There was a little valley between
two hills. We were on one hill and the enemy was on the other.
Then we got orders to move the
machine gun about fifty metres to the left of the big tree that was in the
middle of the valley, and to find a safe place to put it before the enemy blew
us all up.
We found a place to put the gun
and stayed there all night. We could hear shooting all round us, but they
didn’t hit us. When it was day again, our planes came, and they blew up the
enemy soldiers. Then we watched while our men moved off the hill and came down
into the valley.
Suddenly, somebody started
shooting at them! We couldn’t see the enemy soldiers because the jungle was too
thick, but somebody was shooting at our men.
The shooting was in front of us,
which meant that the enemy soldiers were in between us and our men. And this
meant that the enemy was able to come back and find us, so we had to get out
fast.
We began to move back to the
hill, but Doyle suddenly saw more enemy soldiers who were going towards our
men! We waited until they got to the top, then Bones began shooting with the
machine gun. He probably killed ten or fifteen enemy soldiers.
Doely and I and the other two men
threw grenades, but then an enemy soldier shot Bones in the head. I pulled the
machine gun from his hands, and shouted to Doyle.
There was no answer.
Two of them were dead, and Doyle
was only just alive.
I picked up Doyle and put him
across my shoulders, then I ran towards the hill. There were bullets flying all
round me from behind and then I saw more enemy soldiers in the low grass in
front of me! They were shooting at our men on the hill.
I ran fast, shouting and
screaming as loudly as I could. And suddenly I was in the middle of our
soldiers, and everybody was pleased and hitting me on the back! My shouting and
screaming frightened the enemy soldiers away. They just ran!
***
The weeks went past slowly. I got
a letter from My Mom, and I wrote back to her that everything was ok. I also
wrote a letter to Jenny Curran and asked Mom to ask her parents to send it on
to her. But I didn’t get a reply.
Bubba and I decided that we would
get a shrimp boat when we got home again, and catch shrimps, and make a lot of
money. Bubba planned it all.
It started to rain one day, and
it didn’t stop for two months! But we still had to look for enemy soldiers and
one day we found them.
We were crossing a rice field
when suddenly they started shooting at us. Somebody shouted, “Back!” I picked
up my machine gun and ran towards some tress.
I looked round for Bubba, but he
wasn’t there. Then I heard that he was out in the rice field, and he was hurt,
so I left my gun by the tress and ran back into the field. “Gump! You can’t go
out there!” somebody shouted. But I just ran.
Halfway out, I saw another man
who was hurt. He was holding a hand up to me so I picked him up and ran back to
the trees with him. Then I ran out again and found Bubba. There was blood all
over him and he had two bullets in his stomach.
He looked up at me, and said,
“Forrest, why did this happen?” What could I say? Then he said, “Play me a song
on the harmonica, will you?”
There was still a lot of shooting
going on, but I played a song. Then all the colour went out of Bubba’s face and
he said something very softly, “Home.”
And then he died.
And that’s all I’ve got to say
about that.
***
The rest of the night was
terrible. The worst night that I’ve ever known. Nobody could get any help to
us, and the enemy soldiers were so near that we could hear them talking.
Then, when it go light, an
American plane came and used fire-throwers on the enemy and lamost on us!
Suddenly the trees were on fire, and men were running out of the jungle with
burned skin and clothes.
During all of this, somebody shot
me in the back of the leg, but I can’t remember when it happened. It didn’t
matter. Nothing mattered. Bubba was dead, the shrimp business idea was dead
with him. I just wanted to die, too.
Then our helicopters came, and
the enemy soldiers who were left ran away.
An hour later, I was out of there
and on my way to the hospital in Danang.
_to be continued