House to House: A Tale of Modern War

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Authors: David Bellavia

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BOOK: House to House: A Tale of Modern War
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Advance Praise for
House to House


House to House
is a charged and honestly stark view down the rifle-sights of an infantryman during a crucial period in Iraq. Bellavia is our man with boots on the ground. To read this book is to know intimately the daily grind and danger of men at war.”

—Anthony Swofford, author of
Jarhead


House to House
is a terrifically realistic account of the hardest kind of combat known to man. Staff Sergeant Bellavia puts you right there with his men as they see it. This is a must read.”

—Gunnery Sgt. Jack Coughlin, USMC (Ret.), author of
Shooter: The Autobiography of
the Top-Ranked Marine Sniper

“Bellavia is
the
legend from Iraq. He went house-to-house in Fallujah killing the terrorists—alone! MUST reading for all grunts.”

—Bing West, author of
No True Glory

“House to House
is a rare and gripping account of frontline combat. While many who contemplate the nature of war focus on technological change, Bellavia’s account reveals the continuities of close combat. Bellavia illuminates the human, psychological, emotional, and sensory experience of combat at the level of leadership that wins battles—the infantry squad leader. Bellavia’s story unfolds in a compelling narrative that helps readers understand what it is like to be in battle and what it is like to be a soldier.”

—Colonel H. R. McMaster, author of
Dereliction of Duty

FREE PRESS

A Division of Simon & Schuster, Inc.

1230 Avenue of the Americas

New York, NY 10020

 

Copyright © 2007 by David Bellavia

 

All rights reserved, including the right to reproduce this book or portions thereof in any form whatsoever. For information address Free Press Subsidiary Rights Department, 1230 Avenue of the Americas, New York, NY 10020

 

FREE PRESS
and colophon are trademarks of Simon & Schuster, Inc.

 

Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data

Bellavia, David.

House to house: an epic memoir of war / David Bellavia with John Bruning.

     p. cm.

1. Iraq War, 2003–Personal narratives, American. 2. Bellavia, David. I. Bruning, John R. II. Title.

DS79.76.B4465 2007

956.7044'3092—dc22

[B] 2007010697

 

ISBN-13: 978-1-4165-7184-1
ISBN-10: 1-4165-7184-1

 

Visit us on the World Wide Web:
http://www.SimonSays.com

For the Ramrods of the 2nd Battalion, 2nd Infantry Regiment

 

Noli Me Tangere

“Do Not Touch Me”

Contents

Prologue: The Coffins of Muqdadiyah

 

Chapter 1 In the Shit

Chapter 2 Beyond Redemption

Chapter 3 The Measure of a Man

Chapter 4 Land Rush

Chapter 5 Machines of Loving Grace

Chapter 6 The First Angel

Chapter 7 Battle Madness

Chapter 8 Doorways

Chapter 9 Dorothy’s Oz Gate

Chapter 10 Shadows and Wraiths

Chapter 11 Rooftop Alamo

Chapter 12 The Stay Puft Marshmallow Cock

Chapter 13 Where Feral Dogs Feed

Chapter 14 Better Homes and Gardens

Chapter 15 “The Power of Christ Compels You”

Chapter 16 The Failed Test of Manhood

Chapter 17 A Soldier’s Prayer

Chapter 18 Man-to-Man

Chapter 19 Blood Oath

Chapter 20 The Last Caress

Chapter 21 A Smoke on Borrowed Time

Chapter 22 Nut to Butt in Body Bags

Epilogue: Broken Promises

 

Appendix

Brief Glossary of Terms

Acknowledgments

Photographic Insert

Author’s Note

This is a work of nonfiction. Events, actions, experiences, and their consequences have been faithfully retold as I remembered them and based on interviews with a number of the participants. Events to which I was not an eyewitness have been recounted based on documented accounts and interviews. Every event within the book took place, but a few have been reordered or combined for narrative clarity. Conversations presented in dialogue form have been re-created from my memory of them but are not intended to represent a word-for-word documentation; rather, they are intended to invoke the essence of what was said.

HOUSE TO HOUSE

PROLOGUE
The Coffins of Muqdadiyah
April 9, 2004
Diyala Province, Iraq

Dust cakes our faces, invades our sinuses, and stings our eyes. The heat bakes the moisture from us with utter relentlessness. Our body temperatures hover at a hundred and three. Our ears ring. On the edge of heat exhaustion, we get dizzy as our stomachs heave.

We have the spastic shits, with stabs of pain as our guts liquefy thanks to the menagerie of local bacteria. Inside our base’s filthy outhouses, swarms of flies crawl over us. Without ventilation, those outhouses are furnaces, pungent with the acrid smell of well-cooked urine.

All this, and we get shot at, too.

Welcome to the infantry. This is our day, our job. It sucks, and we hate it, but we endure for two reasons. First, there is nobility and purpose in our lives. We are America’s warrior class. We protect; we avenge. Second, every moment in the infantry is a test. If we measure up to the worst days, such as this one, it proves we stand a breed apart from all other men.

Where we work, there are no cubicles. There are no break rooms. Ties are foreign objects; we commute in armored fighting vehicles.

Our workplace is not some sterile office or humming factory. It is a stretch of desolate highway in a vast and empty land. A guard tower burns in the background. Shattered bodies litter the ground around us. Vacant corpse eyes, bulging and horror-struck, stare back at us. The stench of burned flesh is thick in our nostrils. This was once an Iraqi Civil Defense Corps (ICDC) checkpoint, designed to regulate traffic in and out of Muqdadiyah, one of the key cities in the Diyala Province. Thanks to a surprise attack launched earlier in the morning, it is nothing more than a funeral pyre. We arrived too late to help, and our earnest but untrained allies died horribly as the insurgents swept over them. One Iraqi soldier took a direct hit from a rocket-propelled grenade (RPG). All that’s left of him are his boots and soggy piles of bloody meat splattered around the guard tower.

This is our workplace. We began to acclimate to such horrors right after arriving in the country. While on our second patrol in Iraq, a civilian candy truck tried to merge with a column of our armored vehicles, only to get run over and squashed. The occupants were smashed beyond recognition. Our first sight of death was a man and his wife both ripped open and dismembered, their intestines strewn across shattered boxes of candy bars. The entire platoon hadn’t eaten for twenty-four hours. We stopped, and as we stood guard around the wreckage, we grew increasingly hungry. Finally, I stole a few nibbles from one of the cleaner candy bars. Others wiped away the gore and fuel from the wrappers and joined me.

That was three weeks ago. We’re veterans now, proud that we can stomach such sights and still carry out our job. It is this misery that defines us, gives us our identity. It also cleaves infantrymen apart from everyone else in uniform. Some call it arrogance. So be it. We call it pride since we believe fervently in what we are doing.

“Check it out,” calls Staff Sergeant Colin Fitts. He points to a Humvee rolling up the highway toward our battlefield.

The two of us pause and watch the rig approach. Fitts is a Mississippian with a gravelly voice and intense eyes. We’re so close that long ago I learned to tell every entertaining story from his life in more detail than he can, and he can do the same with mine.

The Humvee screeches to a stop a short distance from us. In the right seat sits a clean-cut major. With his tiny, wire-rimmed glasses, he looks like an accountant in Kevlar. He’s so clean that I doubt he’s more than a few hours removed from his last shower. I can’t even remember when I last had one. We’ve been making do with whore’s baths—baby wipes to the armpits and private parts—since running water is a luxury not bestowed upon the infantry.

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