I want to thank Techsan for editing my first submission. I hope you aren't tired of me already because I have some more for ya. Cheers. All, this is the very first submission I have ever entered. I appreciate any and all comments and criticisms. I am trying to get into the realism of interracial relationships in the south in the 1940's so its going to take me a while to get used to the vernacular and such. Hope you enjoy.
Chapter 1
Ste-Mere-Eglise, France, June 6, 1944
He had to live through this. He had to live. Live.
The only thoughts racing through Daniel's mind were of this: life, by any means necessary. There were no other thoughts clouding his mind at this moment—not of his pain-wracked body, his right leg shattered and torn; not of the agonizing sounds of death, his comrades, with whom only hours before he had nervously joked about French women and their insatiable appetite for American G.I.s; not the terrifying sounds of the two German soldiers in the next room of this small French cottage at the end of the city center of Ste-Mere-Eglise. Life was all there was.
As he fought waves of nausea and the onset of shock, Daniel Carven willed himself not to look at the damage to his shattered leg, knowing that to know would do no good. Right now, it was better to concentrate on life, on getting through this alive.
He imagined that the night sky he was staring at through the bedroom window of this humble sanctuary was the sky over his mother's house in North Carolina—clusters of diamonds set in a deep blue velvet swath of midnight sky. The apple blossoms carrying their sweet fragrance from the French orchards outside in the fields through the open window were transformed to the ambrosia-like aroma of the blossoms in his family's peach orchard. And for those few precious seconds, he was home.
There was no shattered bone and torn flesh forcing its way through his dampened pant leg. There was no iron-tainted smell of his own blood soaking through his fatigues and spilling onto the cottage's modest stone floor. There was just Daniel Carven, son of Joshua Carven—and her.
She was his best friend. He had to live to tell her this. She was his confident and he needed to share this moment with her. This was the moment when he knew for the first time in his 24 years who he was, who he was meant to be, and with whom he was meant to share his life. He had to live for her.
The hysterical voices of the French villagers who owned this cottage drifted in and out of his consciousness. They were bravely confronting the German soldiers, desperate to conceal their unexpected ward from his inevitable execution. Daniel understood what he had to do. He couldn't let these good people, who had seen him parachute down from the heavens and land directly in the middle of their enemy-infested town square, die. He had come there to liberate them. Now they were protecting him at risk to their own lives. He had always been a "fixer" and now he had to fix this...and live through it.
His determination doubled in the wake of the deafening silence that followed the sound of a single shot from a Lugar, abruptly ending the angry discourse between the cottage's middle-aged male inhabitant and preceding the agonizing wails of the Frenchman's wife.
He understood both German and French. His mother had been fluent in both languages and spoke to him often in these tongues; he understood that the two German soldiers, who were determined to search the modest home, had grown weary of the farmer's tongue-wagging and decided to settle things once and for all. The shot was all the motivation Daniel needed.
Ignoring the searing pain in his leg and the bruises he'd acquired during his drop, Daniel dragged himself to the bedroom door, which its occupants had left cracked rather than closed shut in order to draw suspicion away from the offending room. Daniel was a sharp shooter with the 505th, part of the United States Parachute Infantry that was supposed to drop down on this target, Ste-Mere-Eglise, on this fateful day, June 6, 1944—D day.
As a sharp shooter, steady eyes, hands and nerves were the tools of his trade. Any other man in his condition wouldn't have been able summon the fortitude required to do what he had to do this moment. As luck would have it, his targets this night were mere feet from him, not hundreds of yards. His skill as a marksman wouldn't be taxed or compromised by his injuries.
As he reached the bedroom door, his belly on the cold flagstone floor, his teeth gritting to ward off the screams of pain stuck in his throat, Daniel reached for his sidearm, a Colt M1911 service pistol. He drew the weapon. Fighting the blurring veils of pain dancing before his eyes, he took aim.
The first shot caught the younger of the two German soldiers between the shoulder blades and exited just below the man's Adam's apple, shattering his windpipe and spraying blood in the face of his surprised comrade, who had not expected the attack. He dropped to the floor in a vain attempt to staunch the flood of his essence from this mortal wound.
Daniel was lucky. The second soldier had not expected his adversary to be lying on his belly, taking aim at him. Before the soldier realized from where the shot had come, Daniel fired again, catching the second man between the eyes, the force of the blow knocking the soldier backwards. He fell on his back, mere feet from the front door.
The farm woman had not expected this avenging angel to have survived his fall from grace, let alone come to her rescue. She stared on in shock and amazement at the events that had only taken seconds to unfold before her eyes. Her husband was dead; the men who had killed him—dead. The young man who should have been dead by all accounts lay sprawled in the doorway of the bedroom, his firearm still clutched in his bloody hands, a trail of blood leading from the middle of her savior's hiding place to where he now lay, seemingly helpless once again.
"Mon Dieu," the woman muttered, a mixture of shock, sadness and surprise superimposed over her lined and weary farm-worn face.
Her gaze shifted from the soldier in her bedroom doorway to the three bodies on the kitchen floor and then back to the young man. "He must live through this day," she prayed silently as she realized what she must do to save him.
As if reading her thoughts, Daniel offered a weak smile and a raspy "merci" before passing out from the pain and loss of blood. Through crimson sheets of agony, he dreamt of home and Lula.
Raleigh, North Carolina— June 30, 1941
"Daniel, if you don't get yourself in here right now and wash up for dinner, I'm gonna feed your dinner to Britches and you can fend for yourself tonight. Your mother and I didn't stand on our feet all day long cooking this Sunday dinner for our health."
Daniel looked up from the skeletal remains of the tractor he'd been attempting to diagnose and grunted in acknowledgment of Caroline's admonishment. The middle-aged black woman had always intimidated him even more than his own mother and he was careful to show her just as much respect. Caroline, or "Mama Corning" or simply "Mama" as he affectionately called her, was in many ways his second mother.
Caroline Corning and Emma Carven, his own mother, had been the closest of friends even though Mama had been in his mother's employ for more than twenty years. There had been only one time in his life when he had dared back-talk his second mother, and that had earned him a pop in the mouth from both his mother and his mama. He had learned not to test the limits of motherly discipline after that. Now it was, "yes, Mama," or "yes, Mom," depending on who was doing the talking.
"I'll be in directly, Mama," Daniel replied, trying to suppress the irritation in his voice.
He'd been working on the damn tractor all day long and it still couldn't figure out why it refused to start.
Cursing under his breath for fear of incurring Mama's wrath should she hear such blasphemy, he began throwing his tools in his father's love-worn tool box, stopping only a moment to wipe his greasy hands on an old piece of cotton rag that used to be one of his father's favorite work rags. Sometimes he could swear that he still smelled his father's hands, oil-stained and wreaking of gasoline, on the rag even though the hundreds of washing the piece of cloth had withstood would have made that impossible.