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A Christmas in No Man's Land (standard:drama, 2722 words) | |||
Author: TJC | Added: Dec 14 2004 | Views/Reads: 3936/2559 | Story vote: 0.00 (0 votes) |
In December of 1914, a young British soldier has both the best and worst Christmas of his life. | |||
It was Christmas Eve and the shelling had finally stopped. The quiet was as flagrantly obvious as had been the din of the exploding bombs. It was also just as hard on the nerves, for all too often the silence was a prelude to an attack by the enemy. Timothy Collins couldn't see any movement across the landscape of barbed wire that lay between the trenches. He wondered what the actual name of this French soil was. To him it was Hell, pure and simple. Dusk was settling quickly on the battlefield. It was getting cold and he began to shiver slightly. “On to Berlin!” twenty year-old Timothy Collins had shouted some four months earlier. He and the rest of the British nation were full of patriotism when war with Germany was declared. It was to be a gloriously victorious adventure. When asked to “take up the call for England,” he naturally jumped to and fro. Along with his buddies, Mitchell Hargrave and Ronald Rowe, he enlisted in the Army in August, 1914, under the encouraging banner Join with your pals. The three of them had arrived in France the previous September and immediately saw combat. Any and all of their thoughts of romantic heroism were quickly destroyed in a violent and horrible way. The Germans outnumbered them three to one and attacked in successive waves, completely out in the open. Timothy couldn't believe his eyes; it was virtually impossible to shoot his rifle without killing a German, yet they kept coming. Be it bravery or stupidity they kept attacking. It wasn't long before the British Army was in full retreat, doing its best to fight as it back-peddled toward Paris. The war was not supposed to be this way. Before the end of that first month his friend Ronald was killed in an artillery barrage, his left arm completely blown off, his chest and face full of shrapnel. Timothy and Mitchell consoled themselves in the fact that it looked to have been a quick death. The sight of his friend laying in the twisted mass of bodies that had once been British soldiers was an image that would be forever etched into Timothy''s memory. The German advance was eventually halted by British and French forces twenty miles outside of Paris. The enemy was exhausted by the continual attack, and with reinforcements available to the defenders, the tide of battle began to turn. For a time the Germans began to retreat, but soon decided against leaving French soil and began digging into the Earth in a defensive posture. The Allies were forced to do the same thing to take cover from the shelling and machine gun fire. A series of trenches grew along the French countryside. The war had become a stalemate. Trench warfare was, in Timothy Collins mind, an all too grisly example of the depths to which the human condition could sink. The Germans would attack and be cut to pieces, only to be followed by the Allies, who would go over the top and be butchered in the same fashion. It was insanity. No attack could be successful against a well fortified trench or machine gun nest. Bodies littered the area between the opposing trenches and it became known to soldiers on both sides as “No Man's Land.” Rotting flesh and open latrines provided the background smells of life in the trenches. Lice and flies were a constant nuisance, though nothing compared to the rats that plagued the armies like a scourge from Hades. Foul beasts gorged themselves on human corpses and occasionally on dying soldiers too wounded to defend themselves. The cold winter months cut down somewhat on the harsh odors, but the elements of rain, mud, and chill brought sickness and disease to the Western Front. The change in season did nothing to curb the rat population. On cold nights it was not uncommon for a rat or two to snuggle up to a soldier as a lover might in bed. By far the most miserable aspect of life in the trenches, however, was the gloomy prospect that there appeared to be no end in sight. Mitchell was killed on December 4, 1914. He had taken only a couple of seconds to pop his head over the top of the trench, an area known as the parapet, and was shot by an enemy sniper. He fell back onto the muddy puddle that was the floor of the trench with his lifeless eyes staring out toward eternity. The bullet had entered just to the side of his left ear under his temple. Join with your pals, Timothy thought bitterly. His pals were both dead. It was impossible for Timothy to peer out over the parapet without Click here to read the rest of this story (238 more lines)
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