Not-too-accurate WWI poem-like story. |
Ardennes. 1915. Bullets whistled over our heads providing a fantastical background to our smoke break. Jacobs and I discussed an issue of the Times that came to us three months late without the Finance section. Reginald, in between bouts on the Lewis gun shouted out that he didn’t much care for the sad state of cricket in Leeds. A barrage of mortars went off behind us accompanied by a crackling of rifle fire and the lieutenant tapped me on the shoulder to ask us to be a bit quieter- he was trying to sleep, after all. Then, a monstrous bang rang out and the earth opened beneath our feet and swallowed the battle. Blackness, all around. A few men screamed, gibbering madly that they did not deserve this fate. The fall went on. Seconds ticked by. The silence unbearable, Jacobs and I, greatcoats flapping around us, resumed our discussion of the newspaper. A former classmate of mine at Oxford fell past, chasing his hat; I gave a respectful nod. Two majors, close-cropped mustaches unruffled by the wind shared a floating cup of tea and discussed the use of poison gas and how many of the enemy it would kill. A Mark IV tank whistled by broken tracks trailing uselessly behind, its doomed crew howling in exultation hoping to find more Germans at the bottom. I tipped my hat to a falling artillery crew desperately and pointlessly trying to load and fire at an enemy gun falling on the other side. A German soldier, pointed helmet stained with mud fell into our group, and in halting English related an article from the Berlin papers of 1914. And all at once, we hit the bottom. I rose, rifle in hand expecting nothing, further blackness or perhaps fire, endlessly burning crisping and searing our flesh from our bones only to discover the trench once again resplendent in its perfect disorder. Reginald resumed with the Lewis The mortars struck up their firing And Jacobs and I took our places on the line firing indiscriminately across the field. We were now in Hell, of course, but hadn’t moved an inch. |