The Walking Vet

Walking mission takes O’Brien from West Virginia to Colorado

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(Ty Rushing/Daily News)

To this day, being called a “baby killer” bothers O’Brien.

“I went from being an 18-year-old high school graduate to a grown man in a big way,” he said in regards to his time in Vietnam. “We had this local kid who was 11 years old and did laundry for us on our base. And kids over there loved candy. I used to carry around the red and white mints that you find all over the place in restaurants and hotel lobbies. I carried a .45 in my right pocket and candy for the kids in my left pocket.

“One day we were getting back from duty,” he continued, “and the laundry kid walked up to me and asked for candy. As I started to go for my candy. He pulled a .380 on me. I just pulled the big .45 and planted one in his chest. I was 18 years old, barely older than that kid, and I just sat there, holding his body and crying. I knew that I had to do it because he could’ve killed me and the rest of my battalion, but it still didn’t feel right. So that’s what made me think, ‘What gives this piece of (crap) the right to call me a baby killer?’”

For his actions, he received unwanted praise from his fellow soldiers.

“As I’m sitting there, holding this kid and crying, I started feeling pats on my back,” he said. “I looked up at those guys and said, ‘I’ve got five rounds left.’ And they all walked away. I don’t tell a lot of people this story. He didn’t deserve to die. Don’t pat me on the back for killing a child. I know I saved our lives, but don’t pat me on the back.”

While his current trip home hasn’t been as eventful, O’Brien has still found his fair share of critics and supporters.

“I get judged a hundred times a day for walking,” O’Brien said. “But, hell, I served two tours in Vietnam. If I want to walk across this country, what’s wrong with that? I’m not a bad person. I’m not wanted. On the road, I’ve met some real good people, and I’ve met some (not-so-nice-people). But mostly good people.”

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