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The 21st Century Squad
It started out as a fireteam.
In a Marine Corps unit, a Fireteam
is made up of four men.
A squad is 13: four men to each fireteam,
three fireteams to a squad, plus, of course, the squad leader,
making a total of thirteen men (and now, women).
I began with a fireteam, and I am now working on a full squad
of people who are ready to go on any peacetime patrol that it
might take to achieve an objective.
In this case, the objective is my freedom.
To fully describe men at war in a Marine Corps squad is a
daunting task, to say the very least.
Each man is a novel in and
of his or her self.
For brevity's sake, and so that I can try my
best to include important qualities of my squad, I am certainly
going to make mistakes, leaving things out that (in my mind so
full of love) I will forget in the moment of writing.
So I will violate a cardinal rule of writing and apologize in advance for
such indiscretions and omissions.
It all began with Misha.
I met her at Norfolk prison sometime
in the late 90s.
She would come into the prison to participate in
the Vietnam Veterans discussion group we held there among the
prisoners once a week.
She told stories of growing up
during war-time Belgium and Germany.
As a little girl she
crossed a continent and a trail of terror, somehow surviving
a series of incredible events and tortures along the way.
When I got transferred to Walpole prison for an infraction which
I term "giving a bowl of spaghetti to another prisoner" —
giving anything of value to another inmate (a word I never use)
is a serious disciplinary infraction — my cellie was a
prisoner named Donny LaDow.
He was also my barber.
Donny and I ate together every night to avoid the prison fare, which to say
the very least was not palatable.
I would have my wife mail Donny
money so that he could go to the prison canteen and
purchase food, which, with the food I bought, we would pool and
make a decent meal.
For that infraction — which we could
prove was not a nefarious drug or other contraband action simply
by producing all of Donny's canteen receipts — we were
both shipped to higher security.
I went to Walpole prison and
Donny ended up in Gardner or SBCC (I cannot recall exactly).
Walpole was the only prison wherein visits were held behind
a thick pane of security glass, and we had to talk over
telephones to one another.
Misha and her husband, Maurice,
continued to visit me weekly, as did my beautiful wife, Lynnette
Kathleen (whom I called "Lynnkat" and had it tattooed on my arm).
I also called Lynnkat "The Major," since during the years I made
her an honorary Marine.
She worked her way up through the ranks,
as periodically I would promote her for acts of valor.
One of those acts occurred when her brother died in her arms on
Christmas day: she calmly applied CPR while talking on the phone
to 911 to get an ambulance to the house. Despite her heroic
attempt to save him, her brother died.
She held him in her arms
until the EMTs finally pried his body from her.
She saved countless lives while working as a nurse in a hospital with
children who suffered from multiple life-threatening diseases.
Many times she had to take extraordinary measures to save them.
Another time, while I was at Old Colony CC in Bridgewater,
I had a severe Myocardial Infarction.
Along with the guards who
escorted me to the hospital, Lynn was told that I probably would
not make it through the night.
They allowed her to come in to say
goodbye to me.
As I opened my eyes and saw her sitting on the
side of my hospital bed, I smiled and grabbed her breast.
She laughed and cried at the same time, and later she told me that this
single gesture told
her more than any words I could ever summon to relieve her angst at that moment.
According to her: "What man on his death bed would cop a cheap feel?"
She knew from that one gesture that I was going to make it.
In 2000 while I was in Walpole, she was diagnosed with
inoperable colon cancer.
I watched through the glass as she
melted away from me through a series of chemotherapy and
radiation treatments.
As she and I talked on those phones, there was a small metal
tray on either side of the glass where we could lean our elbows
— during our allotted, one hour, by appointment, weekly
visit.
Near the end of her struggle, we stood for several minutes
(hell, maybe it was the entire hour?).
We pressed our faces and
hands together on the glass.
I could feel the heat of her hands
on mine even through that thick glass.
Our noses were "touching."
I refused to blink because all I wanted to do was stare directly
into those big green eyes of hers and not miss even
the brie: time a blink would take away from this wonder.
While staring so open eyed, I heard this strange noise.
It was a sort of plinking noise that began slowly and eventually sounded like
a louder and louder pounding.
It was distracting as all hell,
as I stood there staring at this woman who was my partner for
over 30 years.
Finally it was revealed to me that this distracting and irritating noise was
my tears falling on that metal shelf that we leaned our elbows on.
Strange how one can
cry so hard and not blink.
We stood this way until the guard said visits were over. When
she left I knew that
it would be the last time I would ever see her alive.
It was a torturous
truth.
She died two days later, at home with her cat resting on her chest, as the home-care
nurse stood by and watched her last breath.
Not long after that, Misha came to visit.
I did not want to see
Misha or anyone else for that matter.
I just wanted to sit in my
dark cell and will myself to die; to use my mind to make my heart
stop beating.
It had no right to beat now that Lynnkat was gone.
On one of the visits, Misha brought a friend, Karen, with her.
This was the woman whose
generosity to this very day still gives me cause to stop and be amazed.
She took Misha into her home without even knowing
Misha at the time.
Misha and Maurice moved in
with Karen, bringing 24 cats and 2 dogs along with a house-full of furniture that
would not fit in their storage bin.
I tried so hard not to take to Karen.
I did not want to like anyone else.
I just wanted to die and not have my life
given any sort of new meanings.
Karen continued to visit regularly, and I continued to go out to sit there in
that place
where I so recently created this large puddle of tears.
It took all I had just to get my brain
to make my legs obey my commands and walk from my cell on the other end of the
prison to the place where they held these non-contact visits.
Slowly I began to see what kind of person Karen was, and my legs
began to obey me without effort.
It was Albert Schweitzer who is
credited with these words: "Sometimes our fire goes out and
another person will come along and rekindle that spark."
Karen became that spark he spoke of.
I remember the day that I decided
that I would live and I again placed my hand on that hurt-full
glass.
Karen pressed her hand to mine, and I asked her: "Promise
me, Karen, that you will always be my friend."
That was the beginning of the squad.
Jim Lapierre was already there.
I met Jim in 1977, and
he was the truest and most loyal friend any man could ever dare to hope for.
He was
best man at the wedding of the Major and I.
One time (though I know this will embarrass
him) when I was appealing my criminal case, I had the opportunity to retain the legal
services of Wendy Sibbison, at the cut-rate price for the appeal of $12,500.
I did not
know where in the hell I would get such an incredible sum of money.
It may as well have
been a million dollars, because I could not afford that either.
I casually mentioned to
Lynnkat and to my dearest male friend, Jim, what it would cost and how it could be just
like throwing money out the window of a speeding car, for the low chance I had of
succeeding in court on the issues.
Jim contacted Wendy and paid the entire amount of $12,500.
I did in fact lose the appeal, too.
Money out the window of a speeding car.
Jim never blinked an eye.
To him it was well worth the try.
Jim, too, would have done anything he could to see me a free man.
He read my
transcripts several times and knew in his heart that I was an innocent man.
He would not
stop, and to this day he is still by my side and going strong.
His picture can be seen on
my web site, which, incidentally, he maintains, even though he is a workaholic and has a
zillion other things he could be doing.
To say I love Jim would be a gross
understatement.
He is truly my brother in all respects but biological.
Through Karen I met her friend, Barbara Beattie.
After her first visit, at
Souza/Baranowski Correctional Center, the only Level 6 prison (the highest level) in the
state, Barbara became a member of the squad to free me.
She worked tirelessly, and to
this day, well over three years, still goes strong in anything she can contribute.
She finds
ideas and pursues them to the fullest without even asking.
She gets a thought in her head
and turns it into an action.
This is what a squad member is supposed to do.
Barbara became such a true and loving friend, too.
Like the others I have met since I decided
to surrender to life after the Major died, Barbara has given me more
reasons for going on than I can count.
Even though she moved to Bowling Green, Kentucky, Barbara still
continues to work for my
freedom with the other members of the squad, including one that she introduced me to,
by the name of Bob Kerr.
Bob is a writer for the Providence Journal who wrote an article
about a sergeant he had in boot camp at the Officers Candidate School at Quantico who
was later killed in Vietnam.
In the article, Bob wondered if he ever could have made this
sergeant proud of him.
After Barbara sent me the article, I wrote to Bob and told him who
I was and how I was a sergeant in Vietnam.
I told him that even though I did not know
him, I was proud of him for what he did.
He could have gotten out of the Marine Corps
when he flunked out of OCS, but instead he went to Vietnam as a journalist.
There he did
what he does best: write about the things he saw and the people he met.
He put his ass on
the line like the rest of the Marines there.
How could I not be
proud of such a man?
I met Bob after writing that letter to him.
We found a kindred spirit
in one another the likes of which most people could not begin to understand, except for
those who shared the horror of war together.
Men like us found a special bond, a special
love the depth of which even our own families could never imagine.
It was said best in
"Henry V" by William Shakespeare, in the band of brothers speech: "For he who sheds
his blood with me today shall be my brother, and be he ne'r so vile, this day shall gentle
his condition."
Bob and I do love one another more than I could say or he could say, but a
love nonetheless that any who fought in war will easily understand and recognize as
something they too feel. Why do you think that to this very day WWII veterans cry when
they talk about the war?
Bob visits at least once every three or four weeks.
In that short two-hour visiting period,
time passes so quickly that it feels more like two minutes than two hours.
There is
always more we want to say to one another.
We are able to find the meaning of things
we have had stored inside us for all too many years without being able to figure them out
by ourselves — together, easily, without filtering a single word spoken to one
another.
And that marks a true friend and brother: "someone you can think out loud in
front of."
We share the greatest laughter, and unashamedly at times, we allow a tear or
two to leak from our eyes when we recall those we left behind in the mud of an unnamed
rice paddy or patch of jungle. Bob is also an integral member of the squad.
During our first years together, Karen displayed her eye for publishing.
Among other
things, she published a poster entitled "Redemption," which turned out so very
beautifully, with the incredible help and abetment of another long standing
friend, Jack Rogers, from Maine (without whom this poster would not be).
Jack helped with the words
and the inspiration to carry the poster into fruition. Then later, on a visit one day, Karen
said: "Why don't we publish a book of your poetry?"
I thought this would be a great idea. I had done this in
the past at the cost of one dollar per book (Just poetry,
with a thicker paper for a cover that had a design drawn by
a prisoner who had the ability to do so. A few staples in
the middle, and there you have it: A book of poetry.).
Karen took off! I would come out to the visiting room once
a week on her day (which was Thursday; Barbara had
Tuesdays). Walking through the visiting room door, I would
see Karen standing there, beaming (if it is humanly
possible for a person to beam) like a human torch. She
could not wait to tell me about the progress of the book: the
kind of special paper she was going to use, the graphic designer
to do the cover, the special print and other features. All of a
sudden, it occurred to me that this one-dollar book was not what
I had envisioned. I did the math, and, realizing that this was
getting more and more expensive by the day, I protested to her
about the cost, and she kept assuring me it was not all that
much. I have never seen a human being so excited. I would walk
over to where our seats in the visiting room were, and she would
already be standing, with eyes like saucers, and saying:
"Oh my God, Joe, wait till you see such and such." At this point,
my guilt over the cost of this damn book that I had envisioned
being so cheap was quelled, because how in the world was I going
to have the heart to tell her to stop being so excited about
life?
Karen kept saying how her husband, Ron, used to be a printer
and how he kept complimenting her on the incredible job she
was doing. Eventually I got to meet Ron in the visiting room.
Prior to meeting me, he reportedly was a bit nervous and asked
Karen how he should greet me? Just shake hands? Say hello and
then sit down? He did not have to worry about it — I walked
over to Ron and told him that nobody that comes to meet me gets
away without a big hug. Ron and I hit it off big. We
became just the very best of friends. He and his son-in law, Leo,
would come together to visit. Leo was another great guy whom I
immediately came to appreciate, and yes, to love as well.
I used to phone Ron almost every day and would talk with him
for an hour or as long as I could for the time we had out
of our cells. Sometimes I'd call two or three times a day. Ron
was fun to talk to. He had the dumbest jokes that were only funny
because of the way he laughed at them, which caused me to
laugh along with him as it was so damn contagious.
One day I called, and Ron told me he had stage-4 cancer. I did
not know what stage-4 meant until he explained it to me. I asked him where the
cancer was located in his body, and he told me the doctors did not know,
but that they gave him
less than three months to live. I was positively devastated!
Man, I stood stoic on the
phone with him, but when I went back to my cell and the doors closed, I cried like a
baby. How could someone have a cancer and not know where in the body it was located?
Then I found this was not as uncommon as I thought.
So the calls to Ron got even more frequent. He told me he was afraid to die.
I spent every
moment trying to alleviate his fears of death. I told him what I thought death was and
how it was talked about in "The Apology" by Plato, who was a student of Socrates.
For teaching the youth of Athens, Socrates was sentenced to death by being
forced to drink
hemlock, a deadly poison. I read portions of "The Apology" to Ron over the phone,
and I told him my theories about death being part of life, that despite
whatever we did on earth, nothing would ever stop death from happening to us all.
I spent countless hours talking
with Ron about it. I am not sure exactly what it was of all the things I said,
but one day he
told me that thanks to me
he was no longer afraid to die. He was worried about his
children as any man would be, even though Michael, Joelle, and Lori were grown and
had their own children.
When he got worse, and before it kept him in bed till the end, he struggled to come to visit
one last time, because, as he put it, he needed "one more hug" from me. During the visit,
Karen got up to get a drink of water. As soon as she was out of earshot, Ron grabbed my
hand and looked me in the eyes. With a voice as weak as the rest of his body, he said he
wanted me to promise that no matter what, after he was gone, I would take care of Karen
for him. I gave him my solemn oath that of course I would. Man, talk about not letting
tears fall so that Karen would see them! When Ron died soon after I felt
both incredible relief (because according to all accounts he did not suffer at all) and
profound sadness (from yet one more love in my life taken away).
Leo, who is married to Joelle, and Lori, who is Ron's other daughter,
as well as his son, Michael, and all the extended grandchildren are truly my family.
I am by far the most
blessed man on earth: to not only have this extended squad of people whose sole mission
it is to get me out of prison, but to have the beauty of watching all of Ron's children
continue to thrive, as he would have wished for them. So Ron, wherever you are, that
promise I made you is the easiest promise I have ever had to keep, and I will continue to
do as you asked me for as long as there is a breath in my body.
For all who read these simple words, please know that I could not possibly describe with
any eloquence the character of those who are in this squad of mine, nor even begin to say
how full of love I am for each and all.
My heart has reason to beat, my legs to move, and my breath to continue each and every
day, whether the mission of my freedom is complete or not. It is all about this brief
period of time, and I have learned through the strength of those who believe in me to
treasure each and every moment.
This is after all the true meaning of my simple life.
Joe Labriola
July 3, 2007
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