Sunday, October 9, 2011

Civil War: Sincerely, Jacob

He lay prone in a trench filled with muddy water, eyes, nose, mouth filled with the blood grime of a blood soaked battlefield. Outside the safety of his trench the unmistakable pop of distant gun fire and the boom of supersonic aircraft as they flew by provided the background music for the sorry state of affairs this army private found himself in. Somewhere not too far away, in a muddle hole much like this one, peering eyes watched for signs of movement they were unlikely to get. Jacob didn’t want to die for his country, hell he wasn’t sure he was even fight for the right country, but when the feds came knocking on your door in the middle of the night with guns and conscription papers you pretty much didn’t have a choice. That was life in the good old US of A these days. He was lucky at least not to be attached to a UWG division; American’s had it rough working for foreigners.
                “Hey,” sergeant Walker nudged Jacob, “it’s starting to die down, if you want to get some sleep or write a letter go ahead.”
                “Sure, thanks sergeant.”
                A light drizzle pattered on his helmet and down and down his neck drenching his body. Those damn gortex pants and jackets they issued didn’t do a damn thing to keep him dry, they only kept the heat in when the sun game out and the humidity got bad. Fucking government issued gear. The ground was soaked from early morning thunderstorms which passed mere minutes before leaving behind only the sweet pitter patter of misty showers and darkling grey skies that at any minutes could open again and finish the job of making his motherfucking trench into a motherfucking in ground swimming  pool a reality. Hurray, just what he always wanted. Doubtless the mother fuckers across no man’s land had better trenches, better equipment, better com, better food, hell probably better weapons that weren’t left over from the War on Terror. Weapons that weren’t left over from the War on Terror; Weapons that weren’t twenty damn years old. Imagine that. The Europeans had modern weapons, the Free Staters had modern weapons, but the US Army had to make due. Real fucking good Uncle Sam.
                He peered over the sagging edge of the trench wall, making sure not to expose himself much to enemy sniper fire. Thousands of strange of C-Wire filled the quarter mile long gap between the Union and Free State lines. Through the smoke and the haze of the desolation that clung to what once was a beautiful open plan near the Canadian border, Jacob could see a small speck of red and blue rising from the enemies position. The Free State flag, red and white stripes of the same patter of the US, flew in the dyeing wind defying the Union Army which bore down upon them. Though it maintained the stripes of the original 13 colonies the traditional blue with white stars in the upper left corner was replaced by a single star not unlike that of the Republic of Texas (or Texass as he liked to call it).
                “Damn Free Staters can’t even be original.”
                Burnt out husks of destroyed tanks and crashed helicopters littered the battlefield with their rusting remains hiding underneath them the bodies of the hundreds (thousands?) killed attempting to take the enemies position. Scraps of twisted metal tossed around like spaghetti poked their jagged entrails into the air like the fingernails of a giant coming back from the dead. And the smell… that scent of burning corpses was never going to leave this place even long after the war was over and gone. Napalming enemy positions (and the occasional “accidental drop on civilians) tended to do that. “Scorched Earth 2” the generals, most of them European, called it, referred to it at the debriefing, smiling as if the targets were so many ants instead of innocent American’s. Funny how foreigners thought referring to the tactics of one American general used against rebels two hundred years before somehow justified them, non-Americans, doing the same thing. Even if the Free Staters were wrong that didn’t justify killing civilians, did it? No, of course it didn’t.
                He crouched into the muddy trench once more and dug into his pocket for a notebook and pen. Though the paper was damp from the rain he could still wrote on it quite well.
             

   Angela, I am lost and need your guiding grace to help me now ease the conflict inflicted onto my mind and body. I didn’t resist my conscription years ago when federal agents came knocking on my door because at the time I felt it necessary to protect our nation from the influence of foreign and domestic enemies that then seemed to close in around us, only to find myself serving under the command of foreign general in a war to subdue fellow countrymen. They say they are leading a coalition in conjunction with American forces, but I know no American would order the atrocities against innocents I’ve seen on a daily basis since the war began. Even now I can smell the remains of Shreport jus south of here, not of ruining buildings or the normal residue of battle alone, but also of the charred remains of what once were its inhabitants. I do not know the given reason this town needed to be destroyed, but I do know no military forces were that at the time of the firebombing. No soldiers lay dead in its streets, no factories of war were destroyed, not a ruined tank or other piece of military equipment (besides the occasional hunting rifle ) could be found though we searched for hours for just such evidence. Only the bodies of civilians and their property.
        I find myself wavering from my previous conviction in the righteousness of our cause every time we advance, for though our leaders spread the lie that we would be greeted as liberators by a grateful populace all I can see on the faces of those we “liberate” is the sad destitute look of those who’ve been wronged. There was no “liberation” in their eyes when we marched down the streets of Edmonton, the people there did not cheer, they did not wave, they made no noise at all. Only the stoic cry of silence could be heard, that and the Polish marching band we brought with us to celebrate the occasion. There was a little girl there, maybe ten, maybe eleven, with curly blond hair and a dirty blue dress who reminded me of Mia. She stood by the road when we passed by, fir burning behind her cold green eyes, and fists clenched. I never saw such hatred before, not from enemy soldiers, POW’s, or even parent’s who’ve lost their children. There was nothing in that girls eyes but genuine unconditional hatred.
        Angi, I love you so much my heart aches for when we’ll see each other again. I cannot long endure this war; please write to me. This war may deprive me of the nourishment of life to which all men are entitled but it can never diminish the joy of your words. Say hello to the family for me.
                                                -Sincerely, Jacob.

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