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John Wayne Said ‘I Don’t Deserve That Salute’ — The Veteran Whispered Back Three Words

He had shaken more hands in hospital corridors than he could count, and not once had the distance between the man on screen and the man on linoleum ever completely closed. He knew it. He had never said it to anyone. A nurse at the front desk looked up and recognized him immediately and began  to say something. He interrupted her gently.

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“Room 14,” he said, “a man named Cobb.” She looked at him with the careful expression of someone managing a situation that has surprised her. She said, “Mr. Wayne, he’s had several difficult days. He may not know you.” Wayne said, “I understand.” She didn’t look entirely convinced, but she let him through. He walked down the corridor.

Stop for a moment and picture that hallway because what you need to understand before this door opens is what Wayne was carrying when he walked down it. Not the letter in his jacket, not the two years of not writing back, something older and heavier and without a name, the thing that had been with him since the fall of 1944 at Aiea Heights Naval Hospital in Hawaii where he had stepped through a curtain  in a cowboy outfit, 10-gallon hat, bandana, two pistols, chaps, boots,  spurs, and found out in the starkest

possible terms what some of the men he had been playing on screen thought of him. He had been booed, not gently, not ambiguously, booed by wounded Marines who had been carried in on litters to watch a movie and had found instead a tall man from California in a costume grinning his movie grin saying, “Hiya, guys,” into the dark of a hospital theater.

The silence had come first, then one voice, then a sound that became a room, and that room becoming a wave until the noise was everything and he was standing inside it alone on a stage.  He had tried to continue. He couldn’t. He left. What was not recorded, what does not appear in any written account of that night, was what John Wayne did after he left the stage.

He didn’t leave. He went backstage and removed the hat. He took off the gun belt, and then quietly, without a handler or an announcement or a camera, he went ward by ward through that building sitting with the men who would let him sit and standing  respectfully at the doorways of the rooms where he understood he wasn’t welcome.

He stayed until a corpsman told him visiting hours were finished. He drove back to his hotel and said nothing about what had happened that night. That was the story without a witness, the part that earned him nothing. What he had never considered, not in the years since, was whether any of the men in those wards had known who it was, whether anyone had seen through the civilian clothes and the missing hat and understood what they were looking at.

He stopped at the door marked 14. He raised his hand. He knocked. A voice said, “Come in.” It was steadier than he expected. He pushed the door open. The man in the bed was not large. The letter had given Wayne some facts without filling in the room. It had given him the outline without the details that only proximity supplies.

What the room gave him now was a man reduced by  illness to something essential, thin the way serious sickness makes a person thin, the oxygen tube at his nose, the wool blanket pulled to his  chest, the window behind him showing the pale October afternoon. There was a television somewhere through the wall of the neighboring room murmuring at a volume too low to make out words.

The room smelled of antiseptic and old wool and the clothes warm particular air of a space where someone has been sick long enough that the room and the person have begun to settle into each other, but the eyes, whatever was happening to the rest of him, the eyes were completely present, sharp and still, the eyes of a man who had spent years watching and had not stopped.

The man looked at Wayne for a moment without speaking, not with the expression people usually produced, not the starstruck recognition, not the tentative smile of someone unsure how to behave in front of a famous face. >>  >> He looked at Wayne the way you look at someone you have been thinking about for a long time and are now measuring against what you imagined.

Then he said, “I didn’t think you’d actually come.” Wayne pulled the chair from the corner and sat down. He set his hat on his knee. He said, “I should have come sooner.” The man said, “You’re here now.” Notice what Wayne didn’t say. He didn’t explain  the two years. He didn’t arrive with a prepared speech or a polished story about why it had taken so  long.

He He sat down with the weight of the thing and let it be exactly as heavy as it was and that was all. There was a silence that surprised Wayne by being comfortable. The hospital made its distant sounds around them, an announcement somewhere over the PA system,  far enough that the words didn’t carry, the squeak of a cart in the corridor, the low television through the wall.

Wayne noticed the smell again, more completely this time, the antiseptic over something warmer and older underneath, the smell of a room that has been occupied long enough that the person and the space have reached an understanding. The man said, “How’d you find out I was here?” “My assistant,” Wayne said, “he handles the correspondence.” The man almost smiled.

“Somebody always reads the mail.” “Everybody reads everything,” Wayne said. “That’s the part you don’t consider when you write a letter.” The man said, “I’m Elias Cobb.” Wayne said, “I know. I know your letter.” Elias looked at him steadily. He said, “I wasn’t sure you’d read it yourself.” Wayne said, “I read it three times.

” Somewhere in the back of his mind, the 2:00 deadline ticked over like a clock nobody had turned off. He didn’t look at his watch. Here is what the letter had said, not all of it. It had been  three pages written in the deliberate handwriting of a man who had started over several times before deciding to keep what was on the page.

But the center of it, the reason Wayne had read it three times in 1966 and then carried it for two years without finding a reply, came down to this. Elias Cobb had been at Aiea Heights Naval Hospital in Hawaii in the fall of 1944.  Evacuated from the Pacific with shrapnel damage and a blood infection that had cost him most of those months to overcome.

He had been in that hospital for six weeks by the night John Wayne walked through the curtain in the theater when the first silence arrived. He had been one of the men who booed. The letter did not apologize for that.  It explained it, which is a different thing entirely. It said that in that room, in that moment, there was a particular and earned fury, and John Wayne stepping out from behind a screen  in spurs and a 10-gallon hat was not the right target for that fury, but it was present,  and so it did what fury does when it has nowhere

better to go. The letter said, “I’m not writing to tell you I was wrong for feeling what I felt. I’m writing because I’ve watched what you’ve done since then, and I think I owe you the truth about what I thought when I walked back to my ward that night.” Wayne had been waiting 24 years to hear what Elias thought when he walked back to his ward.

That was the part the letter hadn’t reached. Three pages and it had gone to the edge of the most important sentence and stopped. Whether from exhaustion or intention, Elias had arrived at the center of the thing and left it blank, and Wayne had sat with that blank space for 2 years unable to fill it from his end because filling it required Elias, and Elias required a room.

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