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> > > FALLING FROM THE SKIES

There’s a definite pucker factor when the door opens on a C130 jump plane at 1,250 feet. The sudden roar of the outside airstream has a way of instantly focusing the mind, sending tremors through the nervous system right down to the balls of the feet. The amygdala of every young paratrooper-in-training is lighting up with the same neon-blinking message: your destiny is a raging void of air and sky. Just outside the open doorway of the airplane that is bucking up and down in the turbulence is a small ledge bordered with a white stripe marking the last footfall before thin air.

Paratroopers never forget the first jump.

Jeddah Deloria, who used to catch rattlesnakes for fun while growing up in Rancho Cucamonga, California, had a palpable case of the jitters when he stepped onto that ledge. Like so many who would become part of the Chosen Few, he hated heights yet was compelled to push the limits of that fear by volunteering for the US Army Airborne. When the moment finally came and the Philippine-born Deloria stood second in line approaching the door, the patchwork pattern of the earth below looked almost artificial. And when he jumped, it wasn’t at all the way he thought it would be. The warm, loud airstream sucked him up and away so that a fraction of a second later he was floating under a canopy in utterly peaceful silence. That stutter step of terror followed by absolute serenity was thrilling.

Only a three-week course at Fort Benning, Georgia, separated earth-bound soldiers—“dirty legs,” paratroopers called them—from the ones in the sky. The Fort Benning “black hats,” trainers who cruised the instruction lanes in their black T-shirts and baseball caps to turn service members into paratroopers, cranked out fourteen thousand of them a year. Fort Benning had been making paratroopers since 1940.

The Chosen Few trickled through airborne school at different times, depending on when each entered the Army. In a few cases they went through side by side. The hulking wrestling champion, Pruitt Rainey of Haw River, North Carolina, wound up rooming with beefy Iowa-native Jonathan Albert, and they became lifelong friends, both destined for Chosen.

It was literally a ground-up training program. The first week was devoted to parachute orientation—what it looks like, how it fits, the way it’s worn. Jumping during that first week was limited to stepping off a two-foot-high platform and practicing how to hit the ground. They learned the up-36-out-36 drill, jumping up three feet and out three feet to acquire some distance and separation once they squirted out of the metal monster that would be traveling well over one hundred miles per hour.

During the second week trainees entered an area of Fort Benning that looked like something out of a Universal Studios theme park where there were 12-foot stands with swing harnesses and 34-foot platforms with zip lines attached—all to recreate the feel of descending under a canopy at 16 feet per second—and there were soaring 250-foot towers dominating the skyline. From these a soldier dangling from a parachute was lifted high into the air and dropped. A definite white-knuckler. The point was to teach the trainee how to control the parachute’s descent by tugging down on risers—the straps connecting him to the canopy—in the face of a wind.

Then in the third week they did it all for real. Each had to successfully complete five parachute jumps to pass the course.

When Jon Albert, who enlisted at age twenty after getting a cold call from an Army recruiter, woke up in the barracks on the morning of his first jump, the reality of what he was about to do hit him in the face like a bucket of cold water.

What the hell did I get myself into? I’m deathly afraid of heights…

His stomach churned as he waited with the other trainees on wooden benches inside a warehouse-size staging area, each of them trussed up tightly into a harness with a parachute on their backs and a reserve chute tucked against their bellies. They sat staring at a plaque tacked up on the wall for inspiration. It was shaped like the jump wings they would earn if they graduated. Then came the single-file hike onto the aircraft, and soon they were airborne and ten minutes from the drop zone. Heart rates quickened, and they stood up in unison, hooking up their static lines and checking the harness, helmet, and straps of the soldier in front of them, sounding off if everything was okay. Then the door was opened.

Any refusal to proceed at this point meant automatically failing the course, something that only happened about once every six months.

When Jacob Sones, an eighteen-year-old Texan, was walking out to the plane for his first jump, a trainer nearby trying to put the fear of God in him yelled out, “Shit, Airborne, there’s something wrong with your parachute!” Sones fired right back, “Fuck it, Sergeant Airborne. I’ve got a reserve.” The trainer laughed, but Sones couldn’t help but keep asking anyone standing nearby if his parachute looked okay.

Planes always made the same approach to the drop zone during training. Flying over the Chattahoochee River, they were one minute out. Over a paved road, they were thirty seconds away. And then there would be the green light, a tap on the rump by a jump master, and blue sky.

For Alaska-raised Kyle Silvernale, who would later become a Chosen Company squad leader, the shock of the airstream sucking him away in the midst of his up-36-out-36 felt like divine retribution.

Like getting smacked out of the sky by God. That’s the only way I could describe it.

Jason Baldwin, who turned eighteen one week before basic training, closed his eyes during that first jump—exactly what they tell you not to do.

Oh my God, I’m going to die.

It was straight out of the paratrooper joke guide, the one that says everybody does a night jump the first time because they always do it with their eyes closed. Every one of them found the experience when the chute popped open and they floated soundlessly down to earth exhilarating.

When Mike Denton, the Florida son of a paramedic, first launched himself out of an airplane, his chute popped opened and he was terrified to find that his risers were twisted above his head. He somehow managed to follow protocol and start bicycling his legs like crazy to spin himself out of it.

Scarier than hell.

New Jersey native Chris McKaig, son of a mail carrier, thought his heart was pounding its way out of his chest when they opened the aircraft door and he could hear the rush of air. When they all rose to their feet to hook up static lines, his legs were shaking. And when he jumped, McKaig actually skimmed the side of the aircraft. He wasn’t hurt, but when the chute popped open, there was so much adrenalin coursing through his veins, McKaig couldn’t help but yell, “THIS IS FUCKING AWESOME!” so loud that the black hats could hear him down on the ground.

“Shut up, Airborne!” one of the hats hollered into the sky through a bullhorn. “Quit screaming up there!”

When McKaig touched down, he desperately needed to relieve himself and did so soon afterward, the birth of a ritual. From then on he would christen every drop zone.

It was only about sixty seconds from chute-opening to ground, and trainees quickly found that not everyone was created equal when it came to falling out of the sky. Truly, the bigger they were, the harder they fell. Mike Denton, at six-feet-one, 190 pounds, dropped like a rock.

Almost like a B-movie script for a vintage war film, the troopers who would fill the ranks of Chosen Company hailed from literally every corner of the country. Jason Bogar, the son of a Baptist minister, was raised in Seattle, Washington; Sergio Abad, whose mother abused heroin, grew up in Miami. Jonathan Ayers was from Georgia and vacationed with his family on the Atlantic at Hilton Head, South Carolina; and Matt Ferrara from Southern California and Jonathan Brostrom from Hawaii were Pacific surfers.

For twenty-nine-year-old Chuck Bell, a country-born child of the Ozarks, the first airplane he ever flew on in his life was the commercial flight the Army paid for to take him to boot camp in Georgia. The second airplane he ever rode on he jumped out of.

Every one of them had volunteered, their portal into the military usually a local recruiting office tucked into a strip mall with other competing office space taken up by the Marines, Air Force, or Navy. Often what sealed the deal were the videos a recruitment officer would slip into a VCR—“Here, son, take a look at this”—of soldiers jumping out of airplanes or crawling through mud, looking aggressive and heroic.

It was surprising how many of them signed up after simply driving past a recruiting station and pulling into the parking lot on a whim just to see what the military was all about. That’s exactly what Justin Kalenits did. Living on the outskirts of Cleveland at twenty-one, he wound up joining the Army almost as an afterthought. Life after high school had turned aimless, and the idea of a sudden and dramatic shift into the Army had strong appeal.

I need to get out of here. My life isn’t going anywhere. I’m kind of a punk. I need discipline.

He was twenty-two when he joined Chosen Company. At five-feet-six and 140 pounds, he wound up being one of Chosen’s smallest, even while carrying one of its biggest guns, the squad automatic weapon (SAW). His big, loopy grin and ears that stuck out like jug handles gave him an impish look, like he was always up to mischief.

Tyler Stafford was working as a waiter and bartender at a Champps Sports Bar in Denver in 2005 when he got drunk one night at his buddy’s birthday party and the two suddenly made a pact to join the Army “before we miss the war.” Stafford was the youngest of three children to middle-income-earning parents living in suburban Parker, Colorado. He’d lettered in basketball, football, baseball, and track at Ponderosa High School, and his dream was to fly aircraft. But he blew out his knee playing pick-up basketball shortly before starting basic training for a Marine ROTC flight program, and after that his life lost some direction. The Army offered a course correction. He enlisted at twenty-one.

For many of the Chosen Few, signing up was a chance to exorcise, once and for all, that feeling that they had become perennial disappointments to their parents.

“I know very well that I haven’t turned out to be the man you might have wanted me to be,” Joseph Lancour wrote to his mother, explaining his decision to quit his job at a Burger King and join the Army. He penned the letter from boot camp in Fort Benning in early 2006. “I always allowed myself to accept second place. But that’s not going to be good enough anymore. I’m not going to settle for first loser anymore.… I won’t let you down.”

Joe was the only son of Rob and Starla Lancour, a native of Michigan who grew up near Lake Michigan. His parents divorced when he was five, and Joe spent a childhood shifting back and forth between households during the week.

Joe was five-feet-nine with a narrow build, olive-colored skin, and dark brown eyes. It was after graduating from high school and living in Flint, Michigan, working the grill at a Burger King, that Joe felt the need to turn things around by enlisting in the Army. His father was stunned by the transformation after Joe graduated from boot camp. He seemed confident and mature, and loved the structure, discipline, and camaraderie of the Army. After finishing paratrooper training, Joe Lancour was sent to the 173rd Airborne Brigade.

During the fall and winter of 2006 and the spring of 2007 Chosen prepared for war in eastern Afghanistan with a stew of seasoned combat veterans and brand-new recruits. The roughly 150-man company was, like much of the Army infantry, predominantly young and white. The largest minority was Latino, a little more than 10 percent. There were about ten African Americans; two members of Chosen were born in the Philippines; one was half-Thai, half African American; and one was a full-blooded Native American.

No one stayed with Chosen Company forever. The new company commander in 2006, West Point graduate Matthew Myer, could be expected to remain in charge for the one combat rotation of 2007–2008 before moving on to another assignment and a likely promotion to major. Chosen Company platoon lieutenants like Matthew Ferrara and Devon George could very easily follow the same pattern. Senior enlisted officers like Company First Sergeant Scott Beeson or Platoon Sergeant Matt Kahler and Shane Stockard were probably “lifers” for whom the Army would be a career, but even they would be expected to rotate out of Chosen.

Further down the ranks squad leaders like Staff Sergeant David Dzwik from Michigan or six-feet-three Kyle Silvernale might be just as likely to make the Army a career as go back to civilian life. That was even more true for sergeants who led teams within the squads—because they had even less time in the Army and might be more uncertain about their futures.

But most of the GIs who made up the Chosen Few were young men barely out of their teens. For them the Army was just one doorway on a life path still in search of a destination. Most of them joined for reasons that had nothing to do with a career.

Ryan Pitts just kind of drifted into it. It was early 2003, the nation was at war, Iraq was about to be invaded. Serving his country would be a good thing, Pitts thought, though he was certain all the real fighting would be over by the time he got into uniform.

He was only seventeen, and Pitts’s mother had to approve, and he knew she would never agree to him joining the infantry. The Army recruiter had an idea. He suggested Pitts ask his parents to let him become a forward observer who calls in artillery and air support.

Hey, it wasn’t infantry.

She agreed to sign.

Mike Denton was resolved to serve just as his grandfather and older brother had served before him. These were the wars of his generation, Denton believed, and it was time to step up.

Others, like Chris McKaig, were lured for the reasons a lot of young boys become enthralled with the military, playing at it for hours in the hills and forests of their childhoods and developing a growing fascination with guns and shooting.

Still more were like Jon Albert, who found himself living at home in Cedar Rapids after graduating from high school with no plans for his future as his dad, Dave, prodded him about where he saw his life heading. Jon was ripe for some direction when that cold call came from an intrepid Army recruiter. A video of soldiers in action against a hard-charging musical score did the trick.

A large number of the Chosen Few came from broken homes and arrived in the Army without a father figure or at least none who had been around full-time. Some were like lost boys searching without realizing it for a surrogate family after a childhood of abuse or neglect.

Jacob Sones was one of them. He was born in Waco, Texas, and had one sibling, a younger brother who died in infancy. The tragedy strained the marriage of Phillip and Teri Sones. The couple divorced when Jacob was just a young boy, and he went to live with his mother.

Teri was a free-spirited woman, a new-age parent who taught her son to question authority and encouraged him to read contemporary literature. His father was the opposite—practical and clear-eyed, believing that only sacrifice and hard work led to success. When his mom remarried and moved to Connecticut, Jacob shuttled back and forth between there and Texas. He dropped out of high school in the tenth grade and did a poor job of trying to make it on his own. He was drifting. At his father’s urging, Jacob joined the Army after obtaining his high school degree equivalency certificate and chose Airborne. He was eighteen.

After Fort Benning, troopers in Chosen Company were sent to Italy for additional training before their deployment.

When he reached Camp Ederle near Vicenza, Italy, in mid-2006, for the first time in his life Sones felt really safe—like he had finally caught up on a pathway that had meaning and he was no longer a screw-up. It was an achievement and he could be proud. And Sones loved Italy, in no small part because the Italian drinking age was eighteen. This fed his reckless streak and before long, Sones earned a reputation for acquiring more punishments for misbehavior—Article 15s—than any other soldier in Chosen Company: missing formation, showing up drunk in formation, having military police escort him back to the base. It usually meant a loss of rank and pay as well as extra duty. By the time they later deployed to Afghanistan, Sones was still a private first class. His profligacy lead to one of the more famous bits of Chosen Company lore when he passed out on the grounds of Camp Ederle after a night of drinking. He could feel someone prodding him with a boot and instinctively rolled over and reacted.

“Fuck you.”

It was Lieutenant Colonel William Brian Ostlund. And it was another Article 15.

The officer standing over Sones would lead him and the 2nd Battalion into combat in May of 2007. Ostlund had taken command of 2/503 (2nd Battalion, 503rd Infantry Regiment) the previous June at the age of forty. He was a focused, fiercely driven officer as comfortable—when at war—at raining fire and death down on the enemy as he was laboring to strike an accord with recalcitrant tribesmen over cups of sweet tea. He was also a child of divorce, born in Park Rapids and raised in Detroit Lakes, a vacation area about fifty miles due east of Fargo, North Dakota. As someone of Native American descent, he was fascinated with the local Indian community; he built friendships there and fought beside them with his fists when white boys threw insults. His was a childhood spent outdoors camping and playing hockey; he earned his spending money recovering golf balls and cleaning fish for vacationers. The family moved to Omaha, Nebraska, when Ostlund was fourteen, and by then he was determined to become a Marine infantryman. When a hapless Marine recruiter put him off, the Army won him on the rebound, and by age eighteen, Ostlund had earned a spot with the prestigious First Ranger Battalion, turning nineteen in the Army’s arduous Ranger course. He served more than four years before shifting into the Nebraska National Guard and attending ROTC at the University of Nebraska at Omaha to become an officer.

Ostlund was a platoon leader in the 101st Airborne when he deployed to Desert Storm in 1990. The battalion he was part of was eventually commanded by then-Lieutenant Colonel David Petraeus. It was during a live-fire exercise with Ostlund’s platoon in 1991 that a soldier tripped and fell and accidentally shot Petraeus through the chest with an M16. Then Brigadier General Jack Keane, the deputy commanding general of the division, was standing next to Petraeus when he went down. When Ostlund ran up, Keane said, “Hey, Lieutenant, your battalion commander has been shot. Treat him, medevac him, and get this range opened back up. Great live-fire.”

Ostlund had to cut off Petraeus’s gear and called over some infantrymen who had upper-level medical training to give aid, with Petraeus muttering all the while, “This is great fucking training.”

In the intervening fifteen years before Ostlund was named commander of the 2nd Battalion, he earned a master’s degree and taught American political and international security studies at West Point. He served a tour in Iraq after 9/11 as an operations officer for the 173rd Airborne Division.

He saw the 2nd Battalion as a jewel of a unit to lead and was thrilled when he was finally named commander.

The US Army is built on tradition, carefully enshrining what happened in the past for the purpose of enabling and inspiring what happens in the future.

Units of any size can boast a nickname freighted with symbolism: the “All Americans” for the paratroopers of the 82nd Airborne Division, or 1st Infantry Division as the “Big Red One.” The 101st Division “Screaming Eagles” are composed of brigades with such nicknames as “Bastogne” in honor of that unit’s heroism during World War II or the “Rakassans,” the word the Japanese used in wartime dispatches to describe the unit as it fought in the Pacific Theater—it roughly translates to “falling down umbrella man.”

When freshly minted paratroopers arrived in Italy, they found themselves part of a fighting group with its own fabled past. The 173rd Airborne Brigade activated in 1963 took as its nickname the words Nationalist Chinese paratroopers used to describe the unit: tien bien, or “Sky Soldiers.” The brigade was assembled from battalions such as the 2/503, which had its own proud history as one of America’s original parachute infantry units formed in 1941 when that war-fighting concept was still in its infancy. The next year the battalion conducted the first combat parachute jump in US military history into Algeria. In 1943 the paratroopers made the first US combat jump in the Pacific theater of war, dropping into New Guinea. They later fought in the Philippines, earning their moniker, “The Rock,” by recapturing the Philippine fortress island of Corregidor that carried the same name.

The Rock was where US soldiers in 1942 had held out against a Japanese siege for nearly five months after Pearl Harbor. The 2/503 parachuted onto the two-square-mile island on February 16, 1945, and spearheaded taking it back. The victory earned the battalion a Presidential Unit Citation, the equivalent of awarding each soldier in the unit a Distinguished Service Cross, the second-highest award for valor.

Twenty years later the unit was part of the 173rd Airborne Brigade, which became the first Army combat unit committed to the war in Vietnam. The paratroopers fought in some of the bloodiest battles of that conflict and conducted the only major combat parachute jump. The battalion earned a second Presidential Unit Citation for the Battle of Dak To and the assault on Hill 875 in November of 1967. The 173rd Airborne Brigade was deactivated after Vietnam and then reactivated in 2000.

A third Presidential Unit Citation would be waiting for a new generation of Rock paratroopers in the mountains of eastern Afghanistan. Rock Battalion contained six companies: Able, Battle, Chosen, Destined, Fusion, and, lastly, Black Sheep, the headquarters unit.

Chosen paratroopers came up with their own mascot, the Punisher, from a Marvel comic character first created in the 1970s and whose trademark was a skull. The comic-book Punisher was a former Marine turned vigilante who, unlike other superheroes who refrained from taking lives, was not afraid to kill his enemies. The skull emblem found its way onto uniforms and gear, and a five-feet-high plywood version would be posted to the company headquarters building in Afghanistan.

The Chosen Company that prepared for war in Italy had a mixture of experienced soldiers and rookies; many were veterans who had deployed with Chosen to Afghanistan in 2005–2006, including a small number who had been with the unit since its first combat tour to Iraq in 2003. But the majority who went to war during the fateful combat tour of 2007–2008 arrived as new recruits in 2006. And then there were a few who joined Chosen in Afghanistan as necessary replacements as that violent combat tour unfolded.

Pruitt Rainey and Jon Albert had gone through basic training together at Fort Benning. They were roommates during airborne school, and both got tapped to go to Italy and join the 173rd. They had become fast friends, and when they stood together in a formation of new recruits on a parking lot at the Army Garrison in Vicenza and an officer began to arbitrarily assign each soldier to one of the two battalions, Albert took matters into his own hands.

Rainey got picked for the Rock Battalion and Albert for its sister unit, 1st Battalion. So as the crowd of recruits began to split up to form two lines, Albert just eased over to the Rock line and nobody seemed to notice. He got to stay with Rainey and they wound up in Chosen Company together. It was a small violation of the rules, but it profoundly changed the arc of Albert’s life.

Young paratroopers fresh out of airborne school like Kyle White, Tyler Hanson, and Scott Derry were utterly intimidated by the veteran members of Chosen Company after arriving in Vicenza in 2006. Chosen Company had just returned from twelve months of combat in Afghanistan, and the recruits had been nowhere near a battlefield yet. They were in awe of platoon sergeants like Shane Stockard and Matt Kahler, who had already been to war twice—the first time jumping into Iraq and the second time fighting in Afghanistan. And the company sergeant, Scott Beeson, seemed almost larger than life.

The rangy, six-feet-three first sergeant actually had two stars on his jump wings, almost unheard of among conventional forces. He had parachuted with the 82nd Airborne into Panama in 1989, and he had jumped into Iraq with the Rock Battalion in 2003.

A native of Indiana who grew up in the small town of Greenfield about twenty miles east of Indianapolis, Beeson was the second of four children. He had barely finished airborne school when he jumped into Panama and then did an uneventful combat tour during the Persian Gulf War. He left the Army and for a time worked on a factory assembly line making fenders and hoods for Ford while serving in the Indiana National Guard. In 1994 he went back to the regular Army and became one of the original Chosen Few when the company was activated in 2001. By the time he parachuted into Iraq, he had forged this reputation as the apotheosis of a combat warrior. The new recruits idolized him, even though the reputation surprised Beeson himself.

Everybody thinks I’m this super-crazy war monger.

It helped that he was blunt, profane, and refused to suffer fools but had a psychotherapist’s instincts for when to push people and when to acknowledge their pain. Matt Myer and his senior noncommissioned advisor were polar opposites in almost every way. Where Beeson was loud and volatile, Myer was contemplative and careful in thought and action. But the two men somehow made their relationship work and became extremely close, if not always in agreement as the deployment wore on.

First-timers to the Army base in Vicenza found one of the most distinctive US military installations in the world. Because of the land mass required to operate tank or troop formations, most US Army bases were relegated to rural, distant areas. But Camp Ederle was a small, 145-acre military installation located on the edge of the city. It was named for an Italian Army major and World War I hero.

Camp Ederle was more like a campus. There was one indoor gun range. Parachute drops were done at Aviano Air Base two hours away. At the center of Camp Ederle was a statue of the archangel Saint Michael, leader of all angels in the fight against Satan and the designated patron saint of the Airborne.

For some paratroopers who had barely traveled outside the confines of their midwestern hometowns, Italy was a culture shock. Many never fully appreciated the artistic gems only a few minutes’ stroll from the base, preferring instead to enjoy the legal drinking age of eighteen or take in the swanky strip bars on the city’s west side where Eastern European beauties arrived to dance and flirt with American soldiers. They were, after all, young men with plenty of disposable income from thousands of dollars in bonuses earned for enlisting—or re-enlisting.

Many other paratroopers took on Europe as an adventure. Venice was only forty minutes by train, Rome just four hours away. There were low-cost airline flights that could take them anywhere on the continent. Soldiers loved spending a weekend at the Italian seaside resort of Rimimi on the coast of the Adriatic Sea where there were broad beaches, volleyball, alcohol, and night life. The guys who hung out with Jake Walker had the benefit of a translator. Walker, a Mormon who grew up in southeastern Washington, had spent time in Italy as a missionary and knew the language. He helped buddies like Tyler Stafford, Matthew Phillips, Pruitt Rainey, and John Hayes navigate Italian backwaters where English wasn’t readily spoken.

Even better, Chosen soldiers could immerse themselves in the Italian way of life by renting homes in nearby neighborhoods or villages and “living off the economy.” Officers and married soldiers could use their government subsidies to rent flats in quaint seventeenth-century buildings. It was a charmed life for young, single officers. Matt Ferrara, who arrived in 2006 to become leader of Chosen Company’s 1st Platoon, found a two-bedroom, third-floor flat in an ancient building overlooking the piazza in Vicenza with a spectacular view of a thirteenth-century cathedral just outside his balcony.

The five-feet-five officer bore a square-jawed resemblance to a young Bobby Kennedy and held a dual citizenship for the United States and New Zealand. He was only twenty-two when he showed up in Italy in 2006 after graduating from the US Army Military Academy at West Point, where he studied Chinese and economics and finished in the top ten of his class.

Matt Ferrara was born and raised in Torrance, California, the third of five children, including four boys who would all serve in the US military, three of them West Point graduates. Friends called him Matty. He relished living in Europe, buying a Spanish Seat Ibiza supermini car for $2,000 and traveling to Spain to see the running of the bulls in Pamplona, scuba diving in the Mediterranean, skiing the Alps, prowling a Roman emperor’s summer palace in Croatia, and spending weekends in Paris.

For Israel Garcia and his wife, Lesly, traveling to Europe and living in Vicenza was like a dream come true. Sergeant Garcia was born in the Pacific coastal state of Nayarit in Mexico and became a naturalized citizen before enlisting in 2002 out of high school in Long Beach, California. He and Lesly had first met while bowling at the Polynesian-themed Java Lanes and, after a lengthy engagement, married in 2006. They were both twenty-two.

Garcia saw combat in the embattled city of Fallujah while serving with the 82nd Airborne, and when he re-enlisted in 2006, he got the chance to take his new bride to Italy. They were both ecstatic. She had always dreamed of traveling. Now they were going to Venice every weekend, riding the gondolas, tasting gelato, and munching on genuine Italian pizza. Lesly never wanted to go home.

Newlywed couple Sean and Jessica Langevin had married the previous January. They turned their hundred-year-old Italian apartment into a crash pad for some of the single guys from 1st Platoon who had to live on the base. Sean was a native of Walnut Creek, California, just outside of San Francisco. His heritage was a rich mixture of French on his father’s side, Japanese and Portuguese on his mother’s. He was five-feet-seven and stocky, and had long eyelashes that girls in high school thought were hot. Sean was an Eagle Scout who skateboarded, Rollerbladed, and loved to snowboard. He started to lose his hair as a young man and kept his head shaved.

He and Jessica met at a pizza restaurant where she was a waitress and he delivered pies. Sean felt strongly about serving his country and also thought it was a good way to provide for a new family. Despite Jessica’s protests that he stay off the frontlines, he chose to become a paratrooper and was sent to Vicenza.

Jessica loved Italy—the way everything closed down for afternoon siestas, how tending gardens was a daily ritual, and you bought fresh food every day from the markets and cooked it up for dinner at night. That May she got pregnant.

Langevin had a quick, self-deprecating sense of humor and rapidly became one of the most popular soldiers in 1st Platoon. A growing number would come to call him one of their best friends. He and Jessica filled their living room with mattresses, comforters, and pillows so buddies like Chuck Bell, Justin Kalenits, Kyle White (whom they all called Whitey), and Jon Albert had a place to sleep after a night of heavy drinking. Sergeant James Takes, a team leader, and even Lieutenant Matt Ferrara would come by occasionally.

The Langevins weren’t the only ones to succumb to the charms of Vicenza. Gabriel Green fell madly in love. A twenty-five-year-old native of Puerto Rico, he grew up in the Bronx after his parents divorced, got vocational training in food services, and worked as a kitchen manager before enlisting in 2005. He chose Airborne and the job of forward observer, directing artillery fire and close air support. But his life truly changed on a bus in Vicenza when he noticed a dark-haired beauty sitting in the back. He couldn’t take his eyes off of her. When her phone rang with a ringtone from a song by the Puerto Rican reggaeton duo Wisin & Yandel, he struck up a conversation. She was half-Italian, half-Columbian, and her name was Addy. It wasn’t much longer before the six-foot-one paratrooper with the chiseled jaw and dimpled chin had won a lunch date.

It was love at first sight, and within a few months they decided to tie the knot. The day for the civil ceremony in her hometown of Verona unfortunately fell on the day before the platoon was heading to Germany for their last round of field training before deployment. Commanders refused to give him the day off, and Green was frantic. He turned to his platoon leader, First Lieutenant Matthew Ferrara, who managed to fix things. Not only did Green make it to the courthouse on time, but his forward observer teammates were able to show up in their dress uniforms, guys like Kain Schilling and Jason Eller. Lieutenant Brad Mercier was there too. He led the forward observers for Chosen Company, and one of the senior NCOs, Ryan Pitts, attended. Everyone posed for pictures at the courthouse with the beaming new bride. Green didn’t have to report back until the following day.

Matthew Phillips was another of the Chosen Few who got married before heading off to war. The twenty-five-year-old Army specialist from the suburbs of Atlanta, who had enlisted the year prior after living and scuba diving in Central America, had proposed to a school teacher, Eve, he met back in Georgia. He and Eve planned on a wedding in December 2006. Eve didn’t want him spending his bachelor party at one of Vicenza’s famed strip joints, so he, Jacob Walker, and some of the other paratroopers settled on a pub crawl through the city, but not before visiting a dress shop and buying a used white wedding dress that Phillips wore for the duration of the evening. It was a snug fit.

Throughout that spring and summer of 2006 new recruits or transfers filtered into the 173rd, were assigned to the Rock Battalion, and finally divided up between the companies—Able, Battle, Chosen, Destined, and Fusion—and the platoons.

Paratroopers living on base were assigned two to a room, and sometimes apples mixed with oranges. Jeddah Deloria could tolerate a certain chaos in his quarters, but his roommate, Kyle White, was obsessively neat and would follow Deloria around with a broom, making sure everything was ready for any spot inspection.

Life here took some adjusting. When Scott Derry showed up at age twenty-one—the son of an Airborne veteran from Riverside, California, who grew up believing in the creed America First—he woke up the first morning covered in bedbug bites. Without asking permission, he cleared out his barracks room and sprayed some insecticide, an initiative that did not sit well with the Chosen Company sergeant on duty, Jeff Mersman, a big, broad-shouldered Kansan who “smoked” him—made him do push-ups until it ached.

Mike Denton, who arrived in Italy on June 6, 2006, the anniversary of D-Day, quickly broke the code for fitting into an organization top-heavy with battle-hardened veterans: keep your mouth shut, speak when spoken to, bust your backside at every task, and admit mistakes. He breezed into Chosen Company. Denton was born in Pontiac, Michigan, and spent his young adolescence in the suburbs of Detroit after his parents divorced when he was seven. He took the break-up hard, and when his rebellious teenage years began, he was sent to live with his father, a paramedic in Florida. The six-feet-one, 190-pound Denton felt a duty to serve his country and was inspired to be a paratrooper in part by reading about how the 173rd Airborne parachuted into Iraq in 2003. His mind made up, Denton graduated a semester early from high school and was at basic training within four weeks of turning eighteen.

Denton and the other recruits found a culture in Vicenza that was different from many other military installations. It was a tight-knit community where the social formalities of rank among the enlisted soldiers were suspended during downtime. The Army normally frowned on junior and senior enlisted soldiers spending social time with one another—that was fraternizing. But the policy was more relaxed in Vicenza for several reasons. The language barrier with Italians made the Americans feel more isolated. Camp Ederle was a relatively small, more intimate base—you could walk across it in ten minutes. The men tended to venture out in groups, and it was just easier if they could enjoy themselves without the burden of avoiding someone because he was a team leader or a squad leader. During the day it was “Yes, Sergeant” or “No, Sergeant” or “Roger, Sergeant,” but after hours it became “Hey, dude, you wanna go grab a drink?”

For Staff Sergeant Erich Phillips, that breach of protocol took some getting used to. He had come from the 82nd Airborne, where sergeants didn’t share a drink with privates or squad leaders with team leaders. These were the men they had to be tough on during training, to “smoke” for something done improperly. In Vicenza, Phillips watched how they would shed the divisions of rank at night or on the weekends, only to resume when soldiering began all over again in the morning. It seemed to work seamlessly. He was amazed.

“This ain’t the 82nd, dude,” said Stephen Simmons, an old buddy Phillips met up with again in Vicenza. “You’re good to go, man. Just relax.”

The informality was unorthodox, but the end result appeared to be that squads or platoons grew even more comfortable and at ease with one another. They could trust that someone in the group would stay sober enough to make sure everybody got home safely or count on one another in a tight spot if tempers flared at a local bar.

Their trust in one another would be essential in the months ahead.