Reunited feels so good
Lolita Harper
At 3:05 a.m. Friday, 2-year-old Connor Spence was fast asleep in his
Costa Mesa home -- his mind wandering wherever toddlers’ thoughts
travel in the wee hours of the morning. But 45 miles away, at Camp
Pendleton Marine Corps Base, one of the little boy’s dreams was
coming true.
It was at that moment that his father, Staff Sgt. Charles “Cass”
Spence, was marching through a cheering welcoming committee after a
four-month tour in the Middle East. It was then that Cass Spence
found his wife, Carrie, in a crowd of rowdy well-wishers and held her
tight.
After a long plane trip, an hour bus ride and four months of an
emotional roller coaster, Spence let go of the war-torn Iraqi desert
and embraced his family.
“I missed you so much,” Cass Spence said to his wife, holding her
close.
After minutes of a loving embrace, Cass Spence greeted the rest of
his anxious family. His sister Colette gave him a big hug and patted
his right shirt pocket, where their mother had left a parting gift in
January.
“Is your Bible in there?” she asked.
He answered with a knowing nod. Mother Corinne Spence patted her
son’s middle, which had shrunk since she had last seen him.
“Look at how skinny?” she said.
“It’s called the stress diet,” Spence answered.
The civilians in the Spence family underwent their own stress
while Cass was away at war. Night after night for four anxious
months, Corrine Spence prayed for her son. Chuck Spence, his father,
followed the news closely and read the newspaper intently. Sister
Colette Spence fought her urge to write her brother a letter -- a
superstitious promise she had made before he left, meant to bring him
home safely. Carrie Spence went about caring for her newborn and her
household while fielding questions from Connor about his father’s
whereabouts.
The Spence family began preparing for his arrival when they heard
the good news last week. Carrie Spence spruced up the house, having
it cleaned and painted, and stocked the fridge with her husband’s
favorite food and drink.
“I have beer, steak and the remote control just waiting for him,”
she said Tuesday.
Corinne Spence said she was preparing plenty of welcome-home grub
and had pieced together her most patriotic outfit to wear at his
homecoming. Her ensemble included a red, white and blue cap and stars
and stripes socks. She was welling up with pride about her son’s
service.
“I have to tell you, I am so excited, I am crying with thrill,”
Corinne Spence said.
Days of waiting became hours, and the family left for Camp
Pendleton on Thursday night at 11 p.m. The Spences joined hundreds of
people carrying balloons, banners and cameras in a desolate parking
lot on the Marine base at midnight.
Loved ones were told their Marines had flown into March Air Force
base and were loaded onto buses headed for Camp Pendleton. Once on
base, they needed to return their weapons and file paperwork before
greeting their families.
At about 12:30 p.m., a caravan of buses was spotted on the road
above and the sleepy crowd awoke. Cheers erupted, whistles and fog
horns sounded. The mob looked anxiously up the road for their
homebound Marines.
At 1 a.m., members of Echo company marched down the road and into
a swarm of revelers.
After the first wave of tearful reunions and excited embraces, the
rest of the crowd settled back into their lawn chairs for the next
company to come through. It was an hour before the second wave of
service men and women made its way down and the excitement swelled
and ceased, again.
The crowd waited patiently. Mothers held sleeping children,
brothers rested their weary heads in their sisters’ laps, and time
ticked on.
After another hour, Cass Spence’s Golf company marched in. Even
after the men were dismissed, it seemed nearly impossible to find
Cass Spence in the sea of camouflage.
“Where is he?” Carrie Spence asked.
A minute later, he tapped her shoulder, and she turned and melted
in his arms.
“I am just kind of locked right here and I don’t want to go
anywhere,” Cass Spence said.
After a joyous reunion, Cass Spence said he was anxious to get
home. He and Carrie Spence walked to their car, but were stopped
along the way. Various Marines called out to their commanding
officer, introducing Cass Spence to their parents, wives and
children. Mothers hugged him and fathers gave him a hearty handshake,
thanking him for his service and leadership overseas.
“I told you he’d be back,” Cass Spence told one man.
Cass Spence put an arm around his wife’s shoulders as they walked
and pulled her closer.
“I am so happy to see you,” he said.
The young couple headed home, where they would join up with their
two small children, whom Cass Spence had not seen since the end of
January.
“I can’t wait to see Connor’s face when he wakes up and sees his
dad for the first time,” Carrie Spence said. “He is going to be so
excited.”
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