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Linda Mills and U.S. Army Staff Sgt. Andrew Mills smile on their wedding day in February 2010. Staff Sgt. Mills, who was serving his third combat deployment, was seriously wounded on June 7 in Afghanistan's Kandahar Province.
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published: Friday, June 15, 2012

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'They're not toy soldiers'

"They're not toy soldiers," Linda Mills told The Unknown Soldiers on April 13. "They're real people, and they're not just numbers."

Less than two months after our interview, Linda, the wife of deployed U.S. Army Staff Sgt. Andrew Mills, was picking up dinner at a local Pizza Hut near North Carolina's Fort Bragg. She was planning a fun Thursday evening with some girlfriends, as was customary while their husbands were deployed to Afghanistan.

As the cheery, blonde-haired military spouse drove home in a car filled with the smell of fresh pizza, a call came in on her cell phone from a strange number. As she answered tepidly, a sinking feeling filled her stomach.

"Your husband has been seriously wounded in Afghanistan," a solemn voice on the other end of the line said. "That is all the information we have at this time."

On June 7, Staff Sgt. Mills, 27, alongside at least eight fellow soldiers with the 82nd Airborne Division's 4th Squadron, 73rd Cavalry Regiment, were wounded in twin explosions in Afghanistan's Kandahar Province. Pfc. Brandon Goodine, 20, of Luthersville, Ga., was tragically killed in the attack.

"The worst call of my life," Linda wrote in an email informing me of her husband's injuries. "I didn't have much information the first 12 hours except the fact that 1) he was alive and 2) he was classified as the highest level of injury according to the Army."

Having profiled this fine Army couple in a previous column, I felt sick to my stomach as I read Linda's heartfelt email. Yet when I called her a few minutes later, I was immediately inspired by the Army wife's calm, compassionate demeanor.

"You don't have to say you're sorry," she told me. "Drew is alive and he'll be coming home soon."

While precise details of the horrific attack are fuzzy, the heroism of Drew and his fellow paratroopers is clear. After Pfc. Goodine suffered catastrophic wounds, Linda said her husband and another soldier were carrying the fallen hero when a second terrorist-planted bomb exploded.

Drew sustained devastating injuries to his legs and abdomen. His fellow warrior lost both his legs.

"I continue to ask you to lift these soldiers and their families up with your prayers," Linda wrote in a Facebook post to family and friends.

After receiving the devastating news while driving home from Pizza Hut, she waited four agonizing hours for information on her husband's condition and whereabouts. At about 2 a.m. Eastern, Linda received a call from a surgeon at Bagram Airfield.

"The doctor stated (Drew) would be intubated for 12 hours before they stabilized him to be flown to Germany for more operations," she wrote.

After an exhausting, sleepless night, Linda's phone rang again. It was a nurse, who uttered the only seven words this Chicago-born, Georgia-raised military wife wanted to hear.

"Your husband wants to talk to you," the nurse said.

Calling his wife "honey bunny," the heavily sedated soldier told her there was a "big chunk missing" from his leg, while the rest of him was thankfully intact.

After cursing the Taliban for murdering Pfc. Goodine, the wounded soldier expressed sorrow for Staff Sgt. Travis Mills (no relation), another hero from his unit. Travis lost both his arms and legs in an April attack, and is currently hospitalized in Bethesda, Md.

"He couldn't imagine the pain Travis Mills went through while losing all his limbs," Linda wrote.

When I met Travis on May 24 at Walter Reed, he told me he'd just talked to Drew by phone. Today, these courageous friends share more than a last name. They are both wounded warriors.

Staff Sgt. Andrew Mills is coming home alive. Pfc. Brandon Goodine, the soldier he was helping carry off a bloody post-9/11 battlefield, is not. The war in Afghanistan is far from over, and as Linda said in April, toy soldiers are not fighting it. These are real Americans making extraordinary sacrifices, which command our undivided attention.

Linda Mills' heart is filled with love for her husband and sorrow for his fallen and wounded comrades. She is also thankful to her family, the Army, and God.

"He's in a lot of pain," Linda Mills said. "But he's coming home."

To find out more about Tom Sileo or to read features by other Creators Syndicate writers and cartoonists, visit the Creators Syndicate website at www.creators.com.




Correction  (by: News-Sun staff  -   6/16/2012)

We are unable to edit the comments in any way. Sorry.

They're not toy soldiers'  (by: Lisa Cloninger  -   6/15/2012)

Please correct my grammer on the letter I wrote to you in regards to the shadow behind the groom. I know I may have mis-spelled several words and wish I would have checked it first.
Thank you again

Thank You and God Bless all the men and women in uniform for yours and your family's sacrifice for Americans and the world.  (by: Lisa Cloninger  -   6/15/2012)

This article caught my attention for the name Mills is the last name of my oldest friend in the world. She was originally from Georgia and has a son in the military, but his father's name is not Mills. She too is an blonde, bubbly personality.
The picture seems to have a "shadow" that looks like Jesus behind the groom. Being a wedding picture, but not in a church I still could not ignore bringing it up. My intent is not to offend any faith or lack of, it's just what I see. I thought "they are such a beautiful couple". As I continued reading the article and was asking God to bless her with many prayers for his return, I finished and it seems it was already answered. :) I then looked closer at the picture and then was like, "WOW, I wonder if they see that". I really needed that today on the heels of hearing such bad news in the paper. So if you don't see it, you missed out.
Thank you for covering this story. While sad, it is a great one to hear there are heros in the world that act before considering their own peril when faced with helping another. Some will say, they get paid to do. Not really. There are many more educated, intelligent people doing jobs like that; that could have any of our jobs if they wanted. They choose to serve others. And it is often with no monetary gain for them and much loss to their physical and mental person. I honestly ask my self why? If you know someone like that, ask them. They will likely look at you and wonder why you have to ask? And then tell you they don't care if you get it or not.
God Bless all the men and women in uniform for all they and their families sacrifice for Americans and the world.
Thank you and your families for being there. And thank God for being with us all.


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