Posted in

John Wayne Saw a Young Marine Selling His Medals at a Pawn Shop — What He Did Next

John Wayne Saw a Young Marine Selling His Medals at a Pawn Shop — What He Did Next

"
"

The afternoon light came in low through the dusty front window of the pawn shop. It fell across the wooden floor in long slanting bars. It caught the dust motes hanging in the air. It made the room look like a church. March 1968, San Diego, California. A small pawn shop on Broadway Street, three blocks up from the harbor.

The kind of place that smelled like leather and gun oil and old paper money. The kind of place where men came when they had run out of options. The owner was a man named Saul Bergstein. 58 years old, balding, heavy in the middle. He wore a white shirt with the sleeves rolled to his elbows and a pair of dark suspenders that pulled tight over his stomach.

He had thick-rimmed glasses that he wore low on his nose. And when he counted money, he did it with both hands. His lips moving silently with the numbers. Saul had owned the shop for 22 years. He had bought it from a man named Riley in 1946, 3 months after he had come back from Europe with the 82nd Airborne.

Saul had jumped into Normandy. Saul had walked across France. Saul had seen things that he never told his wife about. He understood about young men and what they carried. That afternoon, the bell above the door rang. Saul looked up. A young man walked in. He was wearing a faded olive drab Marine Corps service uniform.

The corporal stripes on his sleeve had been sewn on by hand. The trousers were creased, but the crease was old. His shoes were polished, but they had been polished a long time ago. He was 23 years old. He had the haunted eyes of a man who had been somewhere he could not come back from. The Marine took off his cover at the door.

He stood there for a moment, blinking in the dimness. Then he started walking toward the counter. He walked slowly. He walked the way men walk when their feet are pretending to be lighter than the rest of them. In the back of the shop near a wooden rack of vintage Winchester rifles and an old Martin guitar with a cracked neck.

Another man was looking through the inventory. He was tall, broad-shouldered, 60 years old. He wore a plain brown work shirt with the sleeves rolled to his elbows. Dark wool trousers, brown leather boots that had seen a lot of trail dust, and a wide-brimmed dark brown felt hat that had seen even more. His hair was gray-brown, combed back.

His face was weathered the way old leather gets weathered. He had walked into the shop 10 minutes before looking at a 1894 Winchester rifle that Saul had taken in trade the week before. He had been thinking about buying it. He liked old guns the way some men liked old wines. When the bell rang, he looked up.

He did not say anything. He just watched. The Marine reached the counter. He set his cover down on the glass. He pulled a small white handkerchief out of his uniform pocket. The handkerchief had been folded into a square the size of a deck of cards. He set it on the counter. He pressed it flat with the side of his hand.

Then slowly, he unfolded it. Three medals lay on the white cloth. A Bronze Star. The five-pointed Bronze Star with the red, white, and blue ribbon. The medal you got for valor in combat against an enemy of the United States. A Purple Heart. The heart-shaped medal with the purple ribbon. The medal you got when an enemy bullet found you or an enemy mortar found you or an enemy mine found you.

The medal you only got if you had been wounded in combat. A Combat Action Ribbon. The newer one. The blue and yellow-striped ribbon. The Navy and Marine Corps had only started giving it out the year before. It meant you had been in combat. Real combat. Not training. Not patrol. The kind of combat where the air itself was trying to kill you.

The Marine pushed the handkerchief forward across the glass. How much? He said. His voice was hoarse. Saul Bergstein looked down at the medals. He did not move for a long time. He pulled his glasses off. He rubbed the bridge of his nose. He put the glasses back on. He looked at the Marine. Son, he said, how much? I don’t think you want to do this.

How much? Saul leaned both his hands on the counter. He looked at the young man’s face. He looked at the medals. Son, I will give you $40 for the lot. But I am asking you to please take them home and sell me something else. $40. Yes. The Marine closed his eyes. He breathed in slowly. He breathed out slowly.

When he opened his eyes again, they were wet. All right, he said. $40. Saul stood there for a moment longer. He looked at the Marine. He looked at the medals. He shook his head once, small, and then he turned and walked to the cash register at the end of the counter. In the back of the shop John Wayne set the Winchester rifle back on the rack.

He started walking toward the counter. He walked slowly. He had bad knees from too many years of falling off horses for too many cameras. And he had a missing lung from cancer 4 years before. He walked the way old men walk who are not going to apologize for being old. He took his time. When he reached the counter, he stopped. He stood about 3 ft behind the Marine.

The Marine did not turn around. He was watching Saul count out two $20 bills from the register. Wayne looked at the medals on the white handkerchief. He looked at them for a long moment. Then he spoke. Son. The Marine did not move. Son, excuse. The Marine turned. He looked up. He looked up some more. John Wayne was a tall man.

Um 6 ft 4, even slumped a little with age. Even with his hat off and held in his left hand against his chest the way he was holding it now. He was a tall man. The Marine’s eyes adjusted. He saw who it was. His mouth opened slightly. His hand went up halfway to a salute and then stopped, confused. He did not know what to do. Mr. Wayne.

It’s all right, son. Just John. Mr. Wayne, I What’s your name, son? The Marine swallowed. Reeves, sir. Tommy Reeves. Corporal, United States Marine Corps. Where you from, Tommy? Bakersfield, sir, originally. Bakersfield, I know it. Pretty country up there. Wayne looked at the medals on the counter. He looked back at the Marine.

Read More