17 Juillet 1917
The first thing he was aware of was pain. Then came light, but, at first, he thought it had something to do with the pain. Perhaps he was in a fire. But that wasnât the case.
There was an acrid smell, he was wet, his head hurt and the pain seemed to come strongest from his crotch. He gasped, but very little breath came. He put his hands to his face and found rubberized cloth covering his head. He fought with it frantically until it came away from his head.
He looked at the cloth and it all came back. The bombardment, the frantic cry of âGas!â, the struggle to get his mask on, the whistling sound of an approaching shell, then nothing.
He reluctantly looked down at his body and screamed.
âJesus. We thought youâd earned the Croix du bois.â The poilu turned his head and shouted for help.
31 Decembre 1917
âYou see, all of the front-line troops have a⌠well, they have a talisman against evil. And the only evil in the trenches is death. Anyone who has been there knows that no man can defeat death. The only defense is God, or the supernatural. Or both.â
Lieutenant Patrick OâBrienâs injuries had nearly healed. He was to be returned to the front in seven days, but during his convalescence, he had become friendly with Maggie Compton, his American nurse.
âI wonder if my husband had something?â Maggie thought aloud.
Maggieâs eyes got started to mist over. Patrick looked away.
Maggieâs husbandâs military career had been both similar to Patrickâs and very different. Like Patrick, he had enlisted shortly after the war began, but he had joined the Foreign Legion through the French Embassy in Washington, while Patrick had joined the regular French Army by virtue of his double citizenship. Patrick was still at war three years later, while Maggieâs husband had been killed in his first action.
At the start of the war, Patrick had been in Deauville visiting his motherâs family. Things at home in Detroit had gotten too awkward for Patrick to bear. His father had quit his job at the Ford factory to become a union organizer with Eugene Debs. Selling a union to the well-paid Ford workers was not easy, but after Eamon OâBrien had heard Debs speak in Terre Haute, he was convinced that the only way that the auto workers could get a fair shake was to unionize.
Patrickâs mother, Cecile, couldnât help but be upset. She couldnât understand why a man who was making such a good living would stir up trouble. The end result, was a troubled household. So troubled that Patrick found work on a steamer to New York, then to Marseille, where he took a train to his motherâs family home.
The de Tours family had a large apple orchard in Normandy and were happy to see Patrick, though a bit surprised as he hadnât thought to warn them that he was coming. On his arrival they forced him to cable his parents to let them know where he was and that he was well.
Patrick had taken to the agricultural way of life very quickly. He enjoyed the way the leaves came on the trees, then the beautiful white blossoms, and finally the lovely apples. He worked hard for his relatives, making sure that there could be no question that he had earned his place.
During the summer, before the blossoms gave way to the fruit, there was little to do. He swam in the stream that flowed through the property and dried himself by laying in the sun. Or the family would picnic under the apple trees, the fragrant petals sometimes falling on their heads and shoulders.
Often he would cycle to Caen to enjoy the rhythms of the city life heâd left behind in Detroit. Usually, he would just sit with a glass of wine and listen to people talk. His mother had made sure that he learned French when he was growing up, but fluency is difficult to attain without being surrounded by native speakers and Patrick desperately wanted to fit in.
His mother sent letter after letter describing his fatherâs growing radicalism. A beating at the hands of a strikebreaker or the police, brief jailings on trumped up charges, and his increasing reliance on liquor. Patrick dutifully answered each one, in French, but for his part, he spoke of his love for the French countryside, the beauty of the nearby sea, and his affection and respect for his relatives.
In one letter, he asked her how she could ever have left this paradise for his father. She wrote back that love is not a thing that one chooses, but that one is chosen by love. Not having been in love, Patrick could only wonder at a force that might turn oneâs life upside down whether one wished it or not.
âPatrick? Are you listening to me?â
âIâm sorry Maggie. I was thinking of the orchard. What did you say?â
âI said, what kind of things do the men carry? For their protection?â
âSometimes it is a cross--often it is a cross. You are aware of the religious nature of the war? We good French Catholics have God on our side, but, of course, the Germans believe that they have their Protestant God on their side. We are at a stalemate, so perhaps our Gods are of equal strength, or maybe we have the same God and he doesnât care who wins. Thatâs what I think.â
Maggie looked incredulous. âSo God takes no interest in the affairs of men? I canât believe that.â
âHe takes no interest in the affairs of nations,â Patrick clarified. âHeâs interested only in individuals. We are Godâs creations, not nations. God didnât create Germany, or France, or even the United States. Men created them. God worries only about his creations. Would God worry about a hammer or a cooking pot?â
Maggie didnât care for philosophical discussions, because, inevitably, they led her to question why her husband had been taken from her so soon.
âOther than crosses, what do they carry?â
âBibles, of course. There is always a story of how a bible in a tunic pocket stopped a bullet, so men believe it may work for them too. A lot of guys carry a lock of their girlfriendâs, or motherâs hair. Or if they have a wife. A spent piece of shrapnel or a bullet that hit them and fell to the ground. A bullet removed from a wound. Rosseau carries an ear.â
âWhat?â Maggie was horrified. âA trophy?â