Another call to duty
Deepa Bharath
“Mom, I don’t want him to go!”
The young girl hugged her mom, who put her arms around her
daughter and nodded with empathy.
“But he’s our neighbor, mom!” the girl persisted.
Then she ran over to the front yard to join the other kids from
the neighborhood who were playing with red, white and blue balloon
hats.
The star-spangled banner fluttered atop a freshly painted, white
flagpole. Little paper flags were planted firmly in pots that stood
at the entrance to the home. Inside, kids ran around thumping the
hardwood floors as “God Bless the USA” cascaded from a boom box.
But in less than an hour, the laughing and chattering would stop.
Everything would come to a shocking standstill when Victor Bakkila
bid farewell to friends and family before walking away into what
could well be a war zone.
News of the 36-year-old Costa Mesa Police detective’s military
deployment hit family members March 8 when Bakkila got his papers.
“I had no clue I’d have to leave on such short notice,” the Army
reservist said. “It came from out of the blue.”
The Newport Beach cul-de-sac was lined with police cars and
motorcycles Friday as his friends and colleagues in blue stood in a
circle with Bakkila, just talking and wishing him luck on his
mission.
Bakkila will be the first Costa Mesa Police officer to go to war
if he actually gets as far as the Persian Gulf. Bakkila left for San
Jose on Friday afternoon to join the rest of his unit. They would all
go to Fort Louis, Wash., and leave from there.
His mother-in-law, Cathy Crook, put together the little
celebration in honor of Bakkila hours before his flight.
“I’m trying to hold myself together,” she said, with deep emotion.
“It’s really tough, but we’re all very, very, proud of him.”
Bakkila’s wife, Corey, smiled as she greeted friends.
His daughters Blake, 8, and Baylee, 5, chatted with the woman who
was making their balloon hats.
But then Blake was pulled away for a minute for a television
interview. Her friends gasped.
“Look! Blake’s going to be on TV!” one exclaimed.
When Blake came back, blushing, they asked her what she told the
reporter.
“I said I’m proud of my dad,” she replied.
“You did?” another girl piped up.
“Yeah, why shouldn’t I be proud?” Blake asked with authority,
still in a friendly tone of voice.
Her friends seemingly agreed.
The first thought that crossed Blake’s mind when she heard her dad
was leaving was when he would come back, she said.
“I wanted to know how long he’d be gone,” she said, toying with
her balloon hat. “I’m sad, but I know he’s leaving to help our
country.”
Corey Bakkila will keep smiling to keep things normal for her
girls, but life won’t be the same. Being the wife of an officer, she
is knows of the inherent risks of her husband’s job. But going away
to war is different, she said.
“He won’t be home at the end of the day,” she said, throwing a
glance at her husband.
But Corey said she believes in the need for war, which makes it
easier for her.
“I want our army to take out Saddam [Hussein],” she said.
“Besides, I know Vic can handle it. He knows what to do. He’s had his
training.”
Bakkila, who has been with Costa Mesa Police for about six years,
also doubles as a sniper for the department’s SWAT team.
As time went by, Bakkila made the rounds to say his goodbyes. He
hugged his daughters, joked around with friends and said farewell to
his neighbors.
“I’m taking a lot of family pictures,” he said. In his wallet are
pictures of his daughters and in his shirt pocket, a five-inch-long
wooden Madonna.
“A priest gave it to me in basic training,” he said, holding up
the statuette.
His five sisters have also given him St. Matthew’s prayer,
believed to protect soldiers at war.
Neighbor Julie Hovnanian was a staunch supporter of President Bush
and his stand against Iraq.
“But now I wish it weren’t happening,” she said. “We live in a
little bubble in this community. Now the issue has hit close to home
for me. It makes it more difficult.”
His neighbors and family members call Bakkila an “All-American
guy” who can be “depended on with your life.”
“He’s just always there for you,” said brother-in-law Pete Rogers.
“He’s the glue that holds our family together. He’s the one that
organizes family picnics, the first guy to get there and prepare the
food. And he’s still there to clean out afterward. Just an amazing
guy.”
His buddies at the department hung around until the end when the
Bakkilas were ready to leave for the airport.
“He better come back soon,” said Sgt. Clay Epperson. “He’s my
surfing buddy and we were planning a trip to Costa Rica in the fall.
I can’t go without him.”
Four motorcycle officers and several patrol cars, in a show of
respect, escorted the Bakkilas out of the small, residential street.
“He’s our brother,” Lt. Karl Schuler said, as he watched the small
procession of cars leave. “We’re going to miss him.”
* DEEPA BHARATH covers public safety and courts. She may be
reached at (949) 574-4226 or by e-mail at [email protected].
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