Wayne Stinnett Interviews Jesse McDermitt
Hey Jesse, how are ya?
Doing well, I guess. You're the writer, though. So you probably know better than I do.
I guess the first
question is the same as what any two Marines ask. Where are you from originally
and what was your childhood like?
Thanks for
coming out to the island. As you probably know, I was born in Fort Myers,
Florida in March, 1961. Dad was a Marine, as was his dad before him. Dad
insisted on maintaining a home in his and Mom’s hometown of Fort Myers. He
served in Vietnam, but he was killed in action when I was eight. My mom, in her
grief, took her own life and I went to live with my Mam and Pap, dad’s parents.
Before my folks died, me and Mom went to be with Dad a few times, whenever he
was going to be stationed in the same place for a year, so I got to see some of
the world, before he was killed. Mam and Pap raised me to work hard and do for
myself.
Sorry to hear that. What about later, as a young man, before joining
the Marine Corps? Girlfriends?
I guess it was the
typical southwest Florida life for a teen. Pap taught me to fish and dive and
build things with my hands. I helped him build three boats before I was
seventeen. My buddies and I spent a lot of time out on the Gulf, fishing and
diving, and also in the Glades, or down island, camping. I dated a few girls
but nothing serious. I was kind of a gawky kid and a bit shy.
You were once known as one of the best snipers
in the Corps. What was that like?
My job was simple,
locate and remove threats. Most of my time in the Corps was peacetime, but when
the time came to implement what I’d learned, it was just the job. You have to
detach yourself from the fact that you’re taking a human life.
The shot in Mogadishu?
I count that as a
failure and don’t talk about it much. I deviated from the mission, unnecessarily
giving away my location, imperiled other Marines, and in the end nothing was
accomplished except one bad guy was dead and another filled his shoes. The kid
that I’d saved was killed within the hour.
Do you miss it? The action? The Corps?
Every day, man. Not the
action, there’s no glory in war. But, the people I worked with and the
knowledge that I didn’t have to check over my shoulder to know that the guy
behind me had me covered and would give his life for me and me for him, if
necessary. Yeah, I miss that connection sometimes. That kind of camaraderie
doesn’t exist in the civilian world. Everyone’s only looking out for
themselves.
Was it hard to transition to civilian life?
Not at first. I’d
visited the Keys hundreds of times, Mam and Pap had passed on by the time I
retired, and there just wasn’t anyone in Fort Myers waiting for me. So I just
kept heading south. My buddy Rusty put me up for a few days at his house in
Marathon and he helped me buy a charter boat and get set up with the licensing
and all. I lived on the boat and took out a charter now and then. After 9/11, I
went through a difficult phase. Tried to reenlist, but the prior service
recruiter said I should leave this one to the younger guys. Made me feel like
one of those old guys at the Veteran’s Home, telling stories about the glory
days and the Old Corps. I wasn’t yet forty, but already a used up, has-been.
You have a family, right?
Sort of, yeah. I was
married and had two daughters, during my first few years in the Corps. My wife
was unhappy with the deployments and took the girls home to Virginia when I was
deployed to Panama. I saw them a few times after that, but my ex filled them
with lies and eventually I had no part of their upbringing. Until my youngest
found me last year. Kim’s a great kid and spent most of the winter on the
island with me. She’s up in Gainesville now, in college. It took more
convincing for my oldest daughter in Miami to realize what my ex had told them
all their lives were lies, but Eve and I are slowly getting to know each other,
along with my son-in-law and my grand-son.
So, what’s a typical day like in Jesse McDermitt’s
life today?
What day is it? Never
mind, it doesn’t matter. We don’t have clocks or calendars on my island. We
work when work needs to be done and time is measured by the rise and fall of
the tide. Months are counted by hurricane season and tourist season. I get up,
when I get up. I usually swim three miles or kayak five, in the mornings and
then Carl and I work the garden. He and his wife are the island’s caretakers
and we grow our own vegetables, fish, and crawfish in an aquaculture system.
There’s always work to do on the island and we eat what we catch and grow. We
eat when we’re hungry, sleep when we’re tired and if there’s no work to do,
just relax and enjoy life.
What about your involvement with Homeland
Security?
That evolved out of a
necessity to feel needed again and for vengeance. I think I’m pretty much over
both.
Your third wife was killed by terrorists, is
that right?
In a loose sense of the
word, yeah. The men who killed her were really only connected to terrorism by
smuggling their people into the country through the non-existent border that is
the coast of Florida. They’re all dead now.
So, you’re no longer involved with the NSA and
the Caribbean Counter-terrorism Command?
No, like I said, I’m
over that need to feel needed.
Touchy subject?
Fuck you, Wayne. You
know as much about it as I do. Maybe more. Let’s just say we had a difference
of opinion.
No need to get excited, man. Sorry I brought it
up.
So, what’s next? Are you and Linda getting
married?
I don’t know. She’s a
great lady, but she has her career and she can’t do it from my island. And
there’s no way in hell I’m going to live in Miami. We’re just taking one day at
a time.
Hey, I gotta go fishing.
See ya around, okay.
Thanks, Jesse. Best of luck in the future. See
you out on the blue, sometime.
Semper Fi,
Wayne Stinnett, author
of the Jesse McDermitt Caribbean Adventure Series
http://waynestinnett.blogspot.comNote: I did this interview for some fellow writers and will be posting their interviews with their own characters in the coming days.