We left Oklahoma full of excitement over finally being together as a married couple. We were ON OUR WAY! Things were looking up for us. Alan and I were finally picking out our first house. Okay, so we were only 21 and 23. Maybe we’d settle for an apartment or a nice townhouse, but either way, it was going to be OURS, TOGETHER!
Eeeeee!!!! Happy, happy! Joy, joy!
But there was this one problem holding back our complete happiness. Dark, foreboding figures loomed in the corners of my mind. They looked like naysayers to me.
“I hear 4th Infantry Division is deploying to Turkey. Going in from the North,” Alan’s buddies at Officer Basic Course, back in Oklahoma, said.
Thankfully, everything was all “probably”, “maybe”, and “talk of the possibility.” There were no actual set-in-stone facts yet. (You see, at that point, America had not set foot in Iraq as part of the War on Terrorism yet. We were still only fighting in Afghanistan.)
“Ah, no one knows anything for sure, ” I comforted myself. “I’m not believing any of these rumors until I hear them from Alan’s soon to be unit in Texas.”
I always held out hope. This was my turn to finally begin my happily ever after, and all these gloom and doom storm clouds hovering all around me were ignored to the best of my ability.
Gray skies were everywhere, but the sun could come out at any moment. Not a drop of rain had fallen yet. Not a single lightning bolt had actually flashed. They just threatened.
With that mindset, we packed up Alan’s white Blazer and my bright royal blue Grand Am, arguing about the best way to make it all fit, and headed south.
I don’t remember where we were. It was somewhere in the middle of nowhere, Texas. But neither Alan nor I have ever forgotten that day. I’ve never forgotten that punch-in-the-gut from out of nowhere feeling.
Since we were driving two separate cars, Alan didn’t even know what happened, but when he saw me pull over, he pulled over too.
Just like on 9/11, I heard it from my radio. It was somewhere around January 15, 2003. I was all singing at the top of my lungs, until the news came on.
That’s when the news man announced that it was officially released, just that day, that 4th ID did indeed have orders to deploy their division to the northern border of Iraq in preparation for invasion.
Just like that, I was Chicken Little, and my thunder clouds had all just dropped their rain at once. The lightning was everywhere. The thunder was louder than the news on my radio. The rain was so thick I couldn’t see in front of me.
My heart was broken. I was bawling my eyes out. How could this happen? Why did this have to be? Our happily ever after just kept slipping further and further away.
I’d finally gotten to spend a week with my husband, and even that week we’d traveled to all our family’s houses and then come back for him to go out to the field, so really we’d been married 5 MONTHS and still had not spent one regular week together in a home of our own.
There was nothing to say, and not a thing in the world anyone could do to help us.
So in that moment, I did the only sensible thing.
I pulled my car over, laid my head on my steering wheel, and I cried. Alan came over to my car, and I had to explain to him what I’d heard on the radio.
Alan probably wasn’t surprised. He was more connected to the military community, so he understood better that this was coming. Of course, he was not feeling the same way I was. Alan is an Army officer. This was his dream. He was only too willing to go over there and fight some war.
If I said one prayer of lamentation, I said a 1,000. Many petitions were made for Alan’s safety, for direction with my life, for guidance with my next step.
But that first day, I just cried. Bravery was for later. Alan hugged me and apologized and held me while I blubbered.
Reality had reached out and smacked me in the face, so it was time I looked her in the eye. I buckled under the weight of it all, with hours left to drive.
Alan and I dried up my face, hugged, and we drove on.
For last week’s chapter, click here. To start at the beginning of this series, go here.
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Bless your young heart. My daughter is 22 and married less than a year. Easy for me to think of her in your shoes as I read your story.
I like to ignore things too. It sure is easier sometimes. Especially things like a loved one going off to war. I'm so glad you are sharing your story. I am enjoying reading them so much. Enjoy seems like the wrong word, because of the difficulty of it all, but for lack of a better word, I'll go with it and hope you understand what I mean.
Thank you. I'm so glad you are enjoying it. It helps me to know which posts my family likes so I can write more of them. :)
Oh wow, what a story. Those announcements like that have real people behind them. I always think of that when I hear them. Thanks for haring your story.
Thank you.
OMG, my heart dropped while reading this post. I can’t understand the emotions you went through after hearing that announcement, talking about a mood changer. Alan is so gentle and sweet.
Yes!! It was a big day. And yes, Alan is wonderful. Sometimes I forget and I need to remind myself how good he is.
Sigh. I got chills. I can't fully understand your fears and frustrations at this point in the story, but you write so well that I do get it. If that makes sense.
Thank you so much, Tamara.