Mademoiselle Nurse WW1
Copyright oggbashan October 2022
The author asserts the moral right to be identified as the author of this work.
This is a work of fiction. The events described here are imaginary; the settings and characters are fictitious and are not intended to represent specific places or living persons.
Some of the conversations would have been in French or German, told in modern English. Because some of the action takes place in France, measurements are in metres. It won't make any difference to the story if you read yards instead of metres. A kilometre and a half is roughly a mile.
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"Angelique? I can't go any further. I'm tired out and hurting."
"It's only another fifty metres, Simon."
"It might be but that is fifty metres too far."
Mademoiselle, actually Angelique, Madame Dupont, was originally a volunteer nurse when the war started. She passed examinations and now is a paid rehab nurse at this hospital. She had been assigned to me to help with my recovery after losing a foot and lower leg. We had walked out two hundred metres in the grounds and were on the way back but it was too far on my new wooden leg and foot.
"You can do it, Simon."
"You're a tyrant, Angelique. You drive me too far, too fast. I can't do it."
"You can, Simon. If you do, I'll kiss you."
"You will? That is something worth an effort for. I'll try..."
I didn't succeed. I had to stop and sit down for a quarter of an hour at twenty-five metres. Angelique kissed me anyway.
She was assigned to me to help me to walk. Our ultimate aim was for me to walk to her father's farm a kilometre and a half away and back. At present that seemed an impossible dream, but I had been using this artificial leg and foot for only a week.
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Four years earlier.
"Mum? You know how desperate the family's finances are. Josh and I have only had three months work each this year, and Dad just eight months. The winter is coming when any work for farmworkers is difficult. You have two sons and two younger daughters to feed."
"But joining the Army? You could be killed."
"If I, or we are, that would be fewer mouths for you to feed and you would have a small pension. We don't intend to be killed. We should do well in the Army. We are better educated than most Army recruits. We can shoot, manage horses and even drive a car - possibly."
"But when you two got scholarships to the grammar school we had hoped for better, Simon."
"There aren't any jobs for our education locally, Mum. You know that. We've tried in Norwich. There aren't many vacancies there either and we would have to live away from home. That would cost more money than we could afford. The Army would provide accommodation and pay and we could get promoted. Our records from the school's Cadet Force will help."
How could I get Mum to understand? She can't afford to have us at home getting a few months' casual labouring work. The Army wouldn't pay much but anything is better than nothing. Dad's income is erratic. If we didn't grow our own vegetables, we might starve with six mouths to feed.
Two fewer, and those two providing at least some money by allocation, would take the family out of dire poverty to just being able to manage. What I didn't say, because I hadn't told her, is that office jobs in Norwich had turned us down, not because of our examination results, which were good, but because we were farm labourer's sons. We weren't the right sort. The Army didn't care. Anyone reasonably fit would do.
I'm nineteen and a half. Josh is two weeks short of his eighteenth birthday. We thought by joining the regular Army now, when war might happen soon, we should get promotion when the war started, and the Army would be full of volunteers.
Mum still wasn't convinced. She cried when both of us went by train to Norwich to the recruiting office. We intended to join the local regiment that was based in Colchester so when we had leave we could come home.
I was accepted straight away. Simon was told to come back in two weeks when he was eighteen instead of joining as a boy soldier, but he would be accepted then.
We had produced our Cadet Force records and certificates. The Army would write to our school for more detailed information, but we might start with allowances for having been proficient cadets. The recruiting sergeant was very pleased with two recruits that he thought were much better than those he normally dealt with. Both of us had had a perfunctory medical that lasted a few minutes and were passed A1.
I was given a railway pass to go to Colchester. I said goodbye to Josh but would see him again in about two weeks' time.
At the barracks I was fitted with my uniform and allocated to a barrack block. A corporal was detailed off to 'look after me'. I didn't need much looking after. The cadet forces' annual camps had been run like an army unit. By the end of the second day, I was familiar with the routine and undergoing training. Again, that was easy. I had done much of that as a cadet.
I impressed the instructors with my rifle skills, so much so that they tested me for expert rifleman before the end of my first week. I passed, not missing a shot even if one was two inches away from the bull at six hundred yards.
At the end of the second week, when I was expecting Josh to join me within days, I was called to the Regimental Sergeant Major's office.
I saluted him and stood at attention.
"Stand at ease, private," he said.
"I, and some of the officers, have looked at the reports from your training instructors, Simon."
I was startled. I didn't expect the RSM to use my Christian name.
"All of your instructors have not just marked you as 'good' but 'exceptional', Simon. That is almost unique for two weeks. Your school's report on your cadet force experience was equally outstanding. If you had been a gentleman's son, you would be considered for the officer training course. But you're not, are you, Simon?"
"No, Sir. My father is a farmworker."
"I know. It is shown on your recruitment forms. If the army wasn't so class conscious, perhaps you would become an officer."
He sighed.
"But as it is now? You wouldn't be accepted. That's just how it is. However, the regiment is pleased to have you. You have been recommended to become a corporal -- now."
"Sir?" I queried.
"I know. It is almost unprecedented. But as from now, Private Simon Paget is Corporal Simon Paget. Here is your stripe. Congratulations."
"Thank you, sir. What happens now?"
One of the sergeants in the outer office will take you to the six men you will be responsible for. They are all long serving privates who are good soldiers."
"Long serving good soldiers who are still privates? Is there anything I should know?"
"A good question, corporal. They lack your education. They lack almost any education. Two of them can't read. The other four might be able to read like an eight-year-old. As for arithmetic? If they want to count clips for their rifles and the number is more than their fingers? They're in trouble. They also lack ambition. The are happy to be privates with no responsibilities. But on a battlefield? They can act like good soldiers and do."
"Thank you, sir. I'll try to help them. I am sure they will try to help me too."
"They will. That is why almost all new corporals get them for a while. They, and others like them, are the strong backbone of our regiment. They will do what they are told to do and do it efficiently."
"Thank you, sir."
"OK, corporal. Dismiss. And get your stripe sewn on soon."