Lt. Buck Compton got hit in the buttocks. Medic Eugene Roe went to Compton’s aid. Malarkey, Pvt. Ed Heffron, and a couple of others came forward to help.
As Heffron reached to help, Compton looked up and moaned, “She always said my big ass would get in the way.”
He looked at the five men gathered around him. “Take off,” Compton ordered. “Let the Germans take care of me.”
He was such a big man, and the fire was so intense, that the troopers were temped to do just that. But Malarkey, Guarnere, and Joe Toye pulled a door off a farm outbuilding and laid Compton face down on it. Then they skidded him up the roadside ditch to one of the retreating British tanks and loaded him, face down, onto the back end.
The bullet that hit Compton had gone into the right cheek of his buttocks, out, into the left cheek, and out. Lipton looked at him and could help laughing. “You’re the only guy I ever saw in my life that got hit with one bullet and got four holes,” he told Compton.
Compton growled, “If I could get off this tank, I’d kill you.”
Source:
Ambrose, Stephen Edward. “Hell’s Highway.” Band of Brothers: E Company, 506th Regiment, 101st Airborne from Normandy to Hitler's Eagle's Nest. New York: Simon & Schuster Paperbacks, 2004. 128. Print.
Further Reading:
Awhile back HBO did a really good documentary on Easy Company
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FrWZv-dXbR0