Much as they didn't like agreeing with Gus, every soldier there shared the sentiment of disgust with the politicians who changed Memorial Day from May 31 to the last Monday in May. Surely they had done their memories a great disservice.
"Shoot," Lester weighed in, making the spitting motions he used to make in real life, though tobacco isn't evidently allowed in these reunion images, "ain't no time before nobody'll be here. Only thing's keepin' us around these days is the vets themselves, and you can see how few of them there is."
Harvard-trained Robert sighed at the degraded grammar of his comrades, but even he agreed: "Parents make an effort when their kids have to be here for the band, or Scouts; otherwise there'd mostly be just veterans and politicians. "
"Praise be for the Boys & Girls Scouts, though," Roberto said, "long as they put those flags up, we can keep showing up here."
As the bugle plays its' haunting tune, the poets and romantics in the crowd start spotting the soldiers on the edge, too, though nobody could remember any ever coming over to talk. Still, it was enough for most of them that someone besides the kids could still conjure up their faces.
In this Massachusetts cemetery, where soldiers from every conflict are buried, the scene during the bugler's play is stunning indeed. Revolutionary War soldiers in tri-fold hats stand next to World War I doughboys, surrounded by dozens of soldiers of every era, each at attention, straining to will the bugler to play forever, knowing as they do that these ceremonies are fading from the American landscape. Even now, first the poets and then the children get swept away from the mysterious past and return to the pace-driven present, no longer able to see what they once saw; barely able to remember. No last waves or smiles; just the bustle of strollers creaking as parents raced to beat the marching band out of the cemetery. They were eager to begin the summer most Americans had already started by sleeping through this ceremony.
Still, the powerful memories racing through the hearts and minds of the living veterans lingering over the graves enabled these "ghosts" of soldiers passed (or past) to continue to look on a bit longer.
Over to the right stood the stranger who showed up every year but kept to himself. The soldiers in the brush knew him to be a veteran, but no one else in the town did---a privacy he preferred as he struggled with memories of his own.
Under the flagpole raced a dozen children, frantically searching for shell casings from the guns fired in salute. It always ticked the soldiers off that the shell casings were policed as rigidly as the drill sergeants used to make them police cigarette butts in basic training. Just once they wished the kids could find a souvenir shell casing. "Probably go to officers' kids," Littlejohn grumbled, nudging the officer next to him good-naturedly.