Laying the Ghosts of War
Copyright Oggbashan September 2018
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.
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Splat!
A sniper's bullet struck a sandbag between me and Sergeant-Major Seymour following me. It was about seven o'clock in the morning of the final day of the Great War on the Western Front and I was limping along the front line firing trench. I was bringing the news that the Armistice was real and would happen. At eleven o'clock the guns would fall silent. There were only four hours to survive.
But my order of the day had been not to fire unless the enemy fired first. That single shot had started a furious response from our trenches and retaliation from theirs.
"Cease Fire! Cease Fire!" I shouted over the rattle of rifle fire.
It took at least five minutes before my order took effect. In those five minutes six of our men had been wounded, and three were dead, all caused by a single bullet that had missed me.
Ten minutes later the fire from the opposing trenches stopped. Later we found out that their orders had been similar. They hadn't heard their sniper's shot. He was using a rifle. As he had fired the rumble of distant explosions obscured the report in their trenches. The Germans had responded to our fire. They had five dead and eight wounded.
Those eleven dead men and fourteen wounded were on my conscience. If only my order had been simpler, just 'do not fire today'. Our men could have huddled at the bottom of their trenches and none on either side would have died four hours before the end of the war.
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Three years later I was still regretting that order of the day. To me it didn't matter that many other officers on both sides had issued similar orders for the morning of November 11th. It was my order as a senior Infantry Officer that had killed eleven men and wounded fourteen. Those numbers were engraved on my heart, far more than the thousands of men killed as a result of my orders throughout the whole war. I had survived from the early days of late 1914 as an elderly regular second lieutenant who didn't know enough to keep myself alive, to an experienced permanent Major promoted temporarily and hostilities-only to Lieutenant-Colonel and acting as a Brigadier. I had reduced the numbers of men in the forward trenches to a bare minimum on the evening of November 10th but the impact of my order had killed too many of those still there.
There had been no firing in our part of the front line since the previous afternoon when the news came that the Armistice might take place at eleven o'clock on the 11th. If only that sniper hadn't fired, and my order had been different. Nothing could change that now. The knowledge that our six wounded men had recovered fully didn't help me.
What made it worse was that the German sniper hadn't aimed at us. He had just fired a warning shot to tell us the war wasn't yet over. He had demonstrated his long-practised skill by putting his bullet between us.
Every night the faces of the three dead men, Privates Lewis and Owen, and Lance-Corporal Lester, appeared in my dreams sorrowfully reminding me that I had caused them to die so close to the end of the war. Their faces were fixed in my memory when so many other dead men from my troops had faded into oblivion. I knew the names, the hundreds of names, of all those who had died fighting beside me, but the last three were unnecessary deaths.
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My wife Elaine tried hard to comfort me. She knew every time that I had the nightmare of 'What if?'. I thrashed around in bed, moaning in my sleep. She knew the names as well as I did. She tried to comfort me by smothering me between her large soft breasts. Although I enjoyed them they were a real impediment to my breathing. Often I woke up gasping for breath. The nightmare vanished as she stroked my face with a breast, pushed an erect nipple between my lips, and rolled me on my back before she straddled me. She mounted my erection and rode me to a climax. Afterwards she settled down, still holding me with her lower lips, and rested her head on my shoulder. I love her for her concern. I just wish the nightmare would go away.
But it returns, night after night.
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Tomorrow will be hard for me. It is the anniversary of November 11th and our town will be dedicating the War Memorial to those who died in the Great War. Although the ceremony will be led by our local Bishop and a retired General, I will be the senior surviving officer of the Regiment raised from our town. The General had never been near the Western Front. He had been fighting in the Middle East, a different war of movement. Only I and the survivors of our Regiment knew what we had experienced, and the names on the War Memorial are those of our friends and comrades. Some of the survivors were related to the dead. Many of the women who will be there had lost husbands and brothers. The children had lost fathers.
The Bishop will read all the names of the dead, in order of date of their deaths. I couldn't do that. I knew I wouldn't have been able to say the final three, Lewis, Owen and Lester, killed as a result of my stupid order.
Elaine knew that I would be worried. When we went to bed she rode me mercilessly until I fell asleep exhausted. Even so, at three in the morning the nightmare returned again. Elaine smothered me with her breasts until I complained that I couldn't breathe. She rode me again until I went back to sleep.
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The morning of November 11th 1921 was cold and frosty. My wife had to call our maid Hazel to help me to get out of bed and get dressed in my parade uniform. The shrapnel I still have in both legs disables me whenever it is cold. Elaine's ruthless pounding had made my legs worse even though she does most of the work. I lie there wondering how I married such a wonderful wife who supports me so effectively.
Today of all days I can't be pushed in a bath chair. I have to walk and pretend to be the proud Major of three years ago. I always feel embarrassed when Hazel has to help my wife to get me dress. She may be a decade younger than I am but she flirts with me as if I am a desirable male. She, like my wife Elaine, is an attractive woman. If Elaine isn't around Hazel will hug me, pressing her breasts against me. If I'm sitting down the back of my head might be cradled in her cleavage. Elaine knows what Hazel does and encourages her. I have two women who love me.
Whenever the two of them are heaving me about I have a natural reaction to the close proximity of two women I love. It embarrasses me. It amuses them and they tease me by hugging and kissing me.
This morning I feel far from amused or even embarrassed. I admit it. I'm frightened, frightened that I will make a scene or react badly when those three names are read aloud. Private Lewis, Private Owen and Lance-Corporal Lester -- I'm sorry, really sorry, that you died unnecessarily. The other name that will hurt is that of our only son, Peter, who had been a pilot with the Royal Flying Corps. He had lasted a whole six months after joining his squadron in 1916.
There had been nothing I could do to protect him, unlike the troops under my command. His last act, with his broken plane engulfed in flames, had been to crash into a German fighter, wrecking them both. That would have been his fifth kill, making him an ace pilot, but aces had to survive the fifth. His body has never been found but his name will be on the memorial today, as it is on the lists of the missing.