Chapter 1
Walter pressed himself into the mud and held his ears tight. The noise alone was all-enveloping, allowing no thoughts.
His eyes were shut tight, his lips pressed together, every orifice clenched. He was rolled into a ball in a futile attempt to protect his vital organs as he was spattered with earth falling from the sky. His elbows tucked against his knees, he lay still.
The screaming of the shells and the explosions continued around him, rocking the very planet. He was pelted by rocks and clods of soil even though he was surely surrounded by cliffs of wooden palisades with sold ground behind.
Walter became aware of a voice shouting, penetrating his terror. It was a voice that could not be denied; his training had programmed his brain to obey without question. The voice was telling him to stand, to do his duty.
He was aware that his duty was to die for his King and country, his duty was also to do that simple thing whilst performing whatever task that the voice had set. The current task was to stand and face the enemy, hold his rifle and shoot, to watch, to report back to the voice.
Automatically he straightened, opened his eyes and found his rifle in the mud. He stood, made sure that his helmet was firmly on his head. As if that flimsy tin could stop a bullet. It was ridiculous to believe it, but he did all the same because the voice told him so. It might block one of the pebbles falling, but any bullet or a shell fragment would pass straight through.
Some of his mates carried a talisman; a cigarette case or a bible in a breast pocket -- stories abounded of such items saving a life when struck by flying metal but logic told him that this was ridiculous; any self-respecting bullet wouldn't even notice a cigarette case. When it was time to die, he would die.
He made sure that the weapon was clean where it counted and stood, leaning forwards so that he could peer between two rocks towards the enemy. The voice quietened in response.
He dared not to glance back at the sergeant. His job was to face the enemy; the sergeant would be quick to remind him that he had seen him before, had not forgotten his gentle motherly features - there was no need to refresh his memory in that regard.
The position gave him a poor view but that didn't matter. Others were further along the trench filling in the gaps. A fresh mound of earth had sprung up to his side; it was that explosion that had thrown him backwards into the trench, that place of relative safety. The landscape was obscured by the smoke of battle anyway. If an enemy had appeared before him he would have mere seconds to react.
Walter tipped his helmet down over his eyes to increase its pathetic protection and held his rifle against his shoulder. Still the screaming munitions exploded around him.
* * *
Ages later he felt a tap on his shoulder. Relieved, he stepped back for his place to be taken by another soldier who leaned into the earth, weapon already braced. Walter crouched down into the trench and scurried along it to a dugout, a roofed section where a mug of tea was handed to him.
The shelling had now eased off and Walter was able to assemble his thoughts. A brief period of months before he had been an average man selling insurance door to door in the North of England. He was still young but had no great physique. Inevitably, eventually, he had been called up and been sent to an army camp in Wales for training. The army had filled him out, developed muscles and given him a level of fitness that his schooldays had never provided. Even whilst at the front, every few days there was time away from the line and duties included forced route marches; endless tramping across the countryside and back to camp.
They called this 'The Great War' -- sometimes in the press it was the 'War to End All Wars'. There would never be another war they said in the papers, after this. Most likely because there'll be no-one left to fight it, he thought.
He had been taught how to comb his hair, how to brush his teeth, how to polish his boots. The boots that were now soaked and smothered in mud - and would never take a shine again. He, a married man had been taught how to dress the army way, go to the toilet the army way, kill another man the army way.
A man in his squad had died during the training; he had been buried in the local churchyard in Wales even before his widow had arrived. She did not have the funds to pay for the body to be transported home so she went away by herself -- the Sergeant had explained that the army was his home and family now.
Possibly he would never see his wife again, sweet innocent pretty Agnes with her curly blonde hair, whose picture he carried in his cigarette case safe from the damp. Agnes with her sweet smile, set off by a slightly misaligned tooth. Agnes with the warm thighs and soft breasts that she had allowed him to see on their wedding night. A thick thatch of dark hair on her belly, wisps of lighter curls under her arms. Oh, Agnes...
They had known each other for only a short period; a brief courtship abruptly curtailed by politicians in foreign lands. His betters and rulers, whom he could not question.
They had gone together to a photographer's studio when he had received his call-up. The man had a wooden camera on a tripod and a black hood that went over his head. He had taken their shillings (and photograph) without fuss; a line of similar couples were waiting in a queue for their likenesses to be captured. They had returned a few days later to collect their squares of paper bearing stiff unemotional portraits. There had been no time, nor the money for many attempts at an artistic pose or to adjust an expression.
They had married hastily, within the week. A borrowed wedding gown for Agnes, just a few friends and their immediate families present to witness the miserable event.
Now he had been sent to Belgium to prevent the Kaiser from invading England and bayonetting all of the nation's babies. So here he was in a poorly built trench with wooden planks that were both holding the sides and lying in the mud so that the men could walk more easily, together with a disparate bunch of men who were mostly from the same city.
They were replacements for men who had been killed in the same spot -- men who themselves had been replacements for other men who had been killed in exactly the same spot. Men who had done their duty.
They had landed in a French port and a railway train had conveyed them to somewhere in Flanders, a place of boggy river valleys in Belgium which traversed the countryside. Some folks talked about 'hills' and 'ridges' between the valleys but in truth there was nothing worthy of either description.
His new mates were servants, farmers, builders -- people with whom he would never ordinarily have associated with. He had found that they were generally good sorts and would protect him from harm given the chance, just as he would now find himself helping to protect them.
Walter sipped his tea from the hot tin mug that burned his lips. The second lieutenant, the officer in charge of his sergeant who had raised him from the mud by sheer personality, gave him a paper.
By and by the rest of the squad assembled and they made their way along the communication trench to the billet area.