Happy Birthday Mikey
Something to honor our Veterans.
Chance brought the three together, friendship formed a spiritual bond that would last throughout their lives. Dan, the son of a Boston factory worker; Mikey, whose family were Cajun shrimpers from Louisiana; and Luis, a first generation American from California, met at the Army’s AIT (Advanced Infantry Training) school. Even though they haled from different parts of the country the trio shared many similarities, including the exact same birthday. The primary reason the three had for enlisting was to create a better life for themselves and their families. If the road to accomplishing that goal wound its way through the jungles of Vietnam, then so be it.
They had been in country for seven months and seen more than their fair share of action, but remained unscathed. Today’s mission, a simple enemy troop recon, didn’t appear to be anything out of the ordinary. Besides, it was their shared birthday, so what could possibly go wrong? In honor of their special day the Three Musketeers, as they were now known, would stay toward the back of the platoon babysitting a reporter who was imbedded with the company.
All went as expected for the first hour of the mission, then hell’s gates flew open spewing fire, lead and all manner of destruction. The front of the unit suffered the most damage, allowing enough time for the trio and the reporter to dive for cover in different directions. Before they had time to fully assess their situation a dull thud came from the ground next to Mikey. “Grenade” he yelled and in one self-sacrificing movement threw himself on top of the bomb.
As the dust and debris settled, Dan was able to see what was left of Mikey. Luis was also injured, missing a right foot and suffering from shock. What Dan did next, remains somewhat fuzzy even to this day. He remembers picking up a 30-caliber machine gun and walking forward. As one gun would run out of amunition he’d pick up another weapon from a dead comrade or fallen foe, it didn’t matter. When his walk finished, 45 Vietnamese Regulars lay dead around him. He returned to Luis and found the reporter had already applied a tourniquet on his right leg. Dan used branches fastened together with shoelaces from fallen soldier’s boots to construct a litter, then placed his friends on it. With the help of the reporter, Dan dragged his comrades out of the jungle. It was only after they were back at base camp that Dan realized he had been shot three times.
Dan and Luis, along with Mikey’s flag draped coffin, returned to the U.S. on the same aircraft. They were given a plethora of medals and citations. When Dan was well enough, he was released from the hospital and honorably discharged. Luis would never leave the hospital as his mental condition deteriorated to near catatonic. Dan continued to visit him once a week.
Today was the trio’s 69th birthday and 50 years since that fateful day in “Nam”. Dan had scraped by on his disability pension and whatever menial job he could find. Lack of sleep had taken its toll. Falling asleep was not a problem, it was the reoccurring nightmare his brain would generate each night. The battle was on constant replay and he had no off button.
Dan got up, folded his bed back into the couch and decided to have a birthday party. He dressed in his best clothes, and on his way to visit Luis made two stops, one to the party store and one to the bakery. Dan entered the V.A. long-term care facility with a large bag in one hand and a cake box in the other and proceeded directly to Luis’s ward.
He walked past the duty nurse, a humorless woman in her 50s. By the time she unfolded herself from behind her desk Dan was already in Luis’s room and had blocked the door with a chair wedged under the doorknob. Dan began distributing party hats and favors. When security finally arrived, Dan was narrating the saga of the Three Musketeers from Vietnam. The guards, mostly ex-military, recognized that this wasn’t some random act, but a celebration of a fallen comrade’s life and sacrifice. Two of the guards escorted the nurse back to her station and politely but firmly told her to stay out of it.
The party lasted less than an hour and after Dan cleaned up, he went over to Luis and said, “I hope you enjoyed our birthday party.” Luis reached up taking Dan by the shoulders and replied, “Mikey and I thought it was great!” then slumped back into his million-mile stare.
Dan opened the ward door and stepped into the hallway fully expecting to be arrested. Instead, the guards lined both sides of the corridor, snapped to attention and gave him a crisp salute. The nurse scowled but said nothing. Dan walked across the parking lot to his 1996 Toyota Corolla and drove back to his one-room studio apartment. He was exhausted from the day’s events and couldn’t wait to fall asleep. Somehow, he knew that he had found that off button to the nightmare and at for tonight at least he would enjoy an undisturbed, blissful sleep.
Happy Birthday Mikey!
About the Creator
Mark Gagnon
My life has been spent traveling here and abroad. Now it's time to write.
I have three published books: Mitigating Circumstances, Short Stories for Open Minds, and Short Stories from an Untethered Mind. Unmitigated Greed is do out soon.



Comments (6)
Oh, wow. This is so gut-wrenchingly sad. I was crying by the end.
Bonds of brother hood that can never be extinguished. What a wonderfully inspiring, yet sad, tale.
Poor Mikey 😭😭😭😭😭😭 And the way all of them saluted Dan at the end, that really touched my heart. Loved your story!
Oof. That was one hell of a story for Memorial Day Mark. My wife always says the people she deployed to Afghanistan with are now family for life. This was so well written.
Happy birthday Mikey. Friend come from all walks of life...it is the heart that matters. War...what is it good for.
This story is intense. It's amazing how these three guys from different backgrounds became such good friends. Their decision to enlist for a better life shows real determination. And Mikey's act of heroism is truly inspiring. It makes you wonder what would drive someone to sacrifice themselves like that. Also, Dan's actions after the blast sound pretty incredible. How did he keep going like that? Must have been some serious adrenaline.