Flanders (39 page)

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Authors: Patricia Anthony

Tags: #World War I, #trenches, #France, #Flanders, #dark fantasy, #ghosts, #war, #Texas, #sniper

BOOK: Flanders
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I got up. “I better go.”

“If you need me,” he started to say.

“I won’t.”

I shoved your letter in my pocket and left. Back at the sump holes Pickering and Calvert were still cussing. I told them my pa had died, and then I picked up a shovel. They were respectful for a time. Then Pickering told a joke about a man who’d trained his pecker to sing. Calvert dumped a load of mud on Pickering’s foot. I shoved my hand in my pocket and rubbed that spine bone.

That night I got a little drunk. I went to pushing Pickering around. He pushed back, and I would have hit him if Calvert hadn’t pulled me off. I went out walking along the trench until Billings, the sentry, stopped me.

He lifted his lantern. “It’s past lights-out, Stanhope. Best get your arse back to the dugout. Can’t let Blackhall see you drunk. He’ll have you in field punishment soon enough.”

I said, “Fuck Blackhall.”

He laughed. “You’re a caution.” Then his face fell. “Oh! I heard about your father, chum. Me condolences.”

I jumped him. If he hadn’t dropped the lantern quick as he did, if he hadn’t ducked, I’d have broken his nose. Calvert and Pickering, knowing I was up to no good, had followed me. They arrived in time to wrestle me off. Lucky Billings.

“Why’d he want to hit me? You see that? He hit me for nothing. Why’d he hit me?” Billings said.

Calvert had me pinned in a hammerlock. “ ’E’s in mourning.”

They hauled me back to the dugout, kicking and fighting. Pickering scrounged up some rope. The two of them hogtied me, threw blankets over my legs, and told me to go to sleep.

I said they had to let me go. I said I had to piss. I said that come morning, I’d get them.

They said I’d better shut up. That if I kept yelling, Blackhall would come. He’d find out I was drunk.

I told them I hated my father.

Calvert got a Woodbine from his pack. “Mine’s all right.” He struck a match. “I suppose ’e’s all right.” The cigarette was damp, and he had to suck on it hard to get the fire started. “For an ill-tempered sodding little blighter.”

Pickering said, “Mine hates my house. Thinks my wife’s a tart. And when I was at the bank, he was forever asking when I planned to get a decent job. Silly me. All the while I’d imagined I had one.”

“I gets wif me da, I ends up wif me peter shriveled. Stubborn old sot. Never can win an argument wif ’im.”

“Mine’s always in a paddy about something,” Pickering said. “The government’s cocked up. The newspapers print trash. Nothing’s ever right.”

“That’s me da,” Calvert agreed.

I’d stopped struggling long ago. No use. I was too tired. You can’t ever win the war with your father. I closed my eyes and heard Calvert saying, “Pickering? You write a note to me da for me? Just a little note, maybe just asking ’ow ’e’s getting on.”

I slept. I didn’t dream. Now that I’ve been told, maybe Pa’ll finally leave me alone.

 

 

Travis Lee

 

 

* * *

NOVEMBER 1, A POSTCARD FROM THE RESERVE TRENCHES

 

 

Dear Bobby,

 

 

Captain called me in today to tell me that Pa’s sucking flames. Go ahead and do your crying, but don’t bother telling me any more about how he suffered. I see better suffering here most any day.

Kiss Ma for me. Tell her all the old lies about him being in a better place.

Thanks for the goatskin vest.

 

 

Travis Lee

 

 

 

 

NOVEMBER 4, THE RESERVE TRENCHES

 

 

Dear Bobby,

 

 

LeBlanc’d been watching me all that day. That should have set me wondering. He never said nothing to me. Well, neither of us talked. We ate lunch hunkered down in a shell hole. The Boche had thrown some mortars, and we kept having to move. It was cold and it was raining. The mud dragged at my legs, sucked at my feet. My whole body was weighted down with wet. I guess we were both tired.

And I was drinking heavy. It pains me to admit it, Bobby, but I’d been drinking hard again—ever since I’d seen what LeBlanc did to that girl. Drinking makes time go fast; and there’s something nice and uncomplicated about speed, Bobby. It’s got a dimwit kind of happy to it. No thinking. God. No thinking. Thinking slows you down. LeBlanc knows that.

Still, he was watching me; and I knew he was up to something. I drank anyway. My own damned fault. Drink does that to you, too: blunts importance. Muddles things.

I don’t remember going to sleep that afternoon, but I remember waking up.

I was blind.

“LeBlanc?”

It was so damned quiet. But for the cold and the wet, the whole world was missing. I wondered if I’d died without knowing it and fallen into that cloying dark beyond the cypress. I stuck my dirty fingers in my mouth just to taste something. I shouted just to fill up my ears with noise.

“Hello!” I called, hoping the calico girl would hear me. “Anybody?”

She wouldn’t come. My mouth was gritty from the mud I’d tasted, my throat raw from yelling. The air was too cold and clammy to be Hell. I was lying with my head higher than my feet. No Man’s Land, then; and probably a shell hole. But where were our lines? Where were the Boche?

It was one of those nights when the air’s nearly too thick to breathe. No rain, but damp condensed on my face, tickled down my forehead. I took a breath and thought I could smell the sea.

Something splashed through a nearby puddle. I jumped, hissed “Shit, shit, shit,” groped through the darkness for my rifle, couldn’t find it. My heart beat so fast that the insides of my chest quivered.

“LeBlanc!” I called. “Hey! Hey! Anybody!”

No answer—not a tracer bullet, not a flare. I wanted for shelling, longed for the brilliance, for the clamor of it. I scrabbled out of my shell hole, my eyes desperate, my body frantic. I got to my feet, mud sucking and pulling at me. I nearly toppled, nothing but black to hold onto.

“Hey!” I called.

I took a step into nothingness, went tumbling into the dark, splashed into frigid water, smelled dead fish, thought,
Gas. Phosgene gas.
Stale water made me sputter. My eyes stung. I thrashed my way to my feet. I was waist-deep in that stinking water and, God, I couldn’t see.

I clawed my way upslope. At the top I hugged ground, my mind as empty as a panicked animal’s.

The air was icy, there in that blackness. I lay for a long time, my teeth chattering. A sly and terrible way that LeBlanc had of killing me—leaving me drunk and sleeping. For I was bound to perish there in No Man’s Land. I didn’t know which direction to head for safety; if I tried to stay where I was until dawn, I’d freeze to death.

When I saw the blue glow I first thought I was seeing one of those visions you get when it’s so dark that your eyes play make-believe. Still, I crept through the blackness, over jagged trash, over things slimy and wet. My uniform caught, snagged. I was terrified that the blue would evaporate like a mirage when I got closer, but it lingered: a small, contained patch of color. The ethereal sort of blue the sky turns at twilight.

It
was a corpse. A Boche. His skull was cerulean. The tatters of skin left him were the complex hue of the ocean. A god of a creature, Bobby. His hands were open. Maggots shone like golden suns in his palm.

I raised my head and I could see, Bobby. Sweet Jesus, it was beautiful. Across the torn field, bodies gleamed a calm, tender indigo. Rats raced among them, brilliant earthbound meteors. Even the soil teemed and sparkled with life. My own muddy hand burgeoned with it.

I watched a sentry peer over the Boche sandbags—glowing like a yellow petal backlit by sun.

I stood up, but the sentry didn’t raise his rifle. When I looked back at my own trenches, I witnessed a golden angel on the parados take a fiery piss.

So I started home, slogging through the glittering mud, past shell craters where brilliant existence twinkled on the water. Past last season’s bones shining gas-flame blue. Beyond the British sandbags, our sentry was a beacon. Goodson, I saw as I got closer. He didn’t hear me until I was nearly on him.

He raised his rifle quick.

“No,” I said. “Don’t shoot.”

He peered so hard, Bobby. Confused and frightened. Awed by me, maybe.

“It’s just me, Goodson.”

“Gorblimey! Stanhope? That you, Stanhope?”

I climbed over the sandbags and into the sizzling incandescence of his candle. He was so bright, I had to shield my eyes.

Then Goodson was yelling. “Sergeant! It’s Stanhope! Thought he was a ghost! But it’s bleeding Stanhope, Sergeant, standing right in front of me!”

Riddell came sparkling down the trench. He grabbed me by the arms. “You all right, lad? Stanhope, you ’ear me? The boy’s freezing! Get ’im a blanket! Sod all! Get ’im some tea!”

Riddell took me to his dugout. A universe away, he was shouting orders. “Nash? Best get Lieutenant. Bring ’im ’ere. Go tell Captain that Private Stanhope’s been found alive.”

Blackhall came. Then Miller. They asked me questions and I answered. When Miller and Blackhall left, Pickering and Calvert came in. They shook my hand. They clapped me on the back. Filthy as I was, Pickering hugged me. On Riddell’s order, they accompanied me to the medical dugout. The doctor’s assistant gave me a cot, a bucket of warm water, a couple of towels, and a change of clothes.

When everyone left, I scrubbed down, dried myself in the warmth of the brazier. Alone, I watched the mud wall gleam. The intensity of it, Bobby. Life, every place I looked. I slept cradled in it. When I woke, the vision had faded. Just as well.

They kept me a day. When I was released I was told that Miller wanted to see me. I found him in his dugout, reading field reports.

“Now that Blackhall is not about, you should have no fear to tell me: What actually happened out there?”

“Like I said, sir: LeBlanc and me just got separated.”

“I have not discussed my suspicions with Blackhall, but it would not surprise me to find that you were drinking, and that LeBlanc was annoyed enough to leave you where you had passed out.” His doubting eyes searching, still searching.

“You’re right, sir.” His fiancée smiled at me from her perch on the wall. A girl with fire in her. A golden, blazing girl.

He nodded. “Well, I should think your night out has been punishment enough. Still. Intolerable of LeBlanc to report you dead. Despite how Command feels about him, something will be done about it, I can assure you.”

“I know I been a worthless shit, sir. That’s going to change.”

He looked at the picture, then at me. Was it jealousy I saw, or caution? I could never steal her from him. Didn’t have the elegance, the breeding. Wouldn’t embarrass him like that.

“I say, Stanhope! Would you care to see the letter I had started to your family? Worked bloody hours on it. Brilliant piece of prose, actually. Someone should get the good.”

I took the paper. Address neat in the upper left corner.

 

 

Mrs. Leon Stanhope
Box 56

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