Saturday, July 20, 2013

Christmas Truce: A Short Story of the Great War (Part Three)


Christmas Truce - Contents: 

1. Prologue
2. Chapter One

***

Chapter Two

If one Christmas tree was a little odd, the sudden appearance of dozens more was downright extraordinary. They sprung up all along the German line like wildflowers on a spring day in France, bringing more and more British troops, exhausted though they were, out of dugouts and up to the fire step to take a look.

The Christmas Eve sunset was a golden glow, light reflecting off the snow, which had started to melt in places, and touching the gathering clouds on the distant horizon, providing a kaleidoscope of rich colour: purple, red and orange. It seemed like the sky was on fire. It was better that illusion than some nights when it had seemed as though the horizon, smoke-strewn and violently illuminated by the flash and bang of the big guns.

“A shepherd’s delight,” Henry remarked to Martin. “That bodes well, don’t you think?”
Martin wasn’t sure how much he believed in omens anymore. Too much had happened in this war for that sort of thinking, at least in his own mind. He’d been fairly superstitious once, but seeing so many men with talismans that they swore would see them through the war blown to smithereens in front of his eyes had made him somewhat immune to that sort of thinking.

It had been widely reported to the troops that Pope Benedict XV had tried hard to engineer a truce, but his attempts had been soundly rebuffed by warring governments, and none of the British had been particularly surprised. He could only imagine that, across the muddy bog that the battlefield had become, the Germans were as unsurprised. At least officially, there would be no cessation of hostilities. What happened sector to sector was a different story altogether.

“At least we won’t get rain,” Martin replied. “That’s something. What’s that, three nights in a row now that we haven’t been poured on? What a record! You know, Henry, this war’s starting to spoil us.”

Indeed it was. Tonight was as beautiful a night as Martin had seen in weeks, with just a trace amount of wispy cloud drifting out towards the horizon. There hadn’t been nearly enough spectacular sunsets lately, more grey clouds and rain than clear skies. He’d seen some here that reminded him of nights on the Yorkshire moors, where glorious winter sunsets seemed to go on forever, each one more beautiful than the one before. Now, he was getting truly nostalgic; homesick, even.

Sadly, the more Martin thought about Christmas at home, the further away Yorkshire felt. In the grand scheme of things, the fabled moors weren’t that far removed. Yet there was nothing here to remind him of the beauty of the endless undulating green that he knew of home. Here, it was mud and filth, rats the size of footballs, constant death and misery. The worst sort of landscape he could imagine. Yet, strangely, he couldn’t imagine being anywhere else than here on the Western Front. This was the great struggle of his time, and he could not have stomached not being a part of it.

“Well, that’s something to be thankful for, at least,” Henry commented, to no one in particular.

For the first time in far too long, the entire front was quiet. The heavy artillery had stopped and there wasn’t even the errant crack of a Lee Enfield or Mauser to be heard. Martin stood, mystified, the silence so strange, and soon the ringing in his ears – that he hadn’t even known existed until just now, when glorious nothingness had overtaken the battlefield – and looked around, seeing orange-red on the distant horizon, and clear skies overhead, a baby blue colour, darkness just about taking over.

Then: something stranger. At first, Martin thought his ears were playing tricks. The ringing had just subsided, for which he was very thankful, but now he could hear the sound of singing. It was very distant, as though it wasn’t quite even there. Even after he’d shook each lobe, the choral voices continued, deep and booming, quite beautiful. If anything, those voices were somehow getting louder.

It wasn’t until Martin started to look around the trench that he realised he wasn’t hearing things. There actually was a group of voices singing, and it was coming from across No Man’s Land, from the German trenches. First the Christmas tree and now a choir not unlike the baritones that he listened to every year: fine-voiced volunteers who sung at the local church in the lead-up to Christmas. Except, these ones had a decided Prussian twinge to them.

Henry heard it, too, and he turned to Martin, a disbelieving look on his face. “I say, is that – “

Martin nodded. “Carols,” he finished, his ears picking up the tune very clearly now. “I think so, yes. If I’m not mistaken, that’s Good King Wenceslas.”

“What on earth is going on over there?” Henry wondered.

“It appears the Germans are taking the Christmas celebrations a step further,” Martin replied. “I don’t mind listening to those fellows sing. They’re rather strong-voiced, aren’t they?”

“Wonderful singers. My old man did say that if there was one thing the German could do well, other than eat and drink, of course, it’s singing. Do you sing, Martin?”

Laughing at the suggestion and at a growing memory, Martin shook his head. “Once or twice, I’ve been known to recite a few bars, when drunk, mind you, and even my fellows, drunk though they were, threatened to kill me if I continued. I prefer to listen.”

Henry nodded. “Back in my younger days, I was in the church’s choir. I haven’t sung for some time – since before the war, I mean. It hasn’t seemed like the thing to do.”

“Well, they’re doing it now, over there, the Jerries,” Martin observed. “So, now seems as good a time as any. Do you know Silent Night, Henry?”

“Everyone knows that one!”

“So find some of the lads! I think Sykes and Barstow and maybe even Corporal Elton, the demolitions man, are up for a bit of a sing-along at the best of times. I’m sure they’ll join you, if given the chance. Let’s show the Jerries that we’re just as good as they are when it comes to raising a tune, eh? I’d help” – here, Martin grinned – “but it might scare them off and ruin the whole war!”

It didn’t take long to organise. There were enthusiastic voices who were happy to show off their voices to celebrate the season, to show the enemy that British men could just as eloquently sing the Christmas carols and, also, to keep war, for the departure of the sun had precipitated a plummet in temperature, to right on or just below freezing. It was cold enough that men quickly found that the water in their canteens had frozen solid.

Not able to sing, Martin stood next to the hastily-formed choir, listening to their voices, ringing clear and crisply in the night sky, drowning out the German serenade, and he wondered what the enemy were making of events. He couldn’t work out if they’d started singing as a way to draw their combatants – the British – into something similar, though he supposed that it really didn’t matter. Whilst the opposing armies were singing against each other rather than firing artillery, rifles and machine guns, Martin was quite content.

But Sergeant Danson wasn’t, the senior non-commissioned officer in the platoon rounding the corner from the next bay, his face as red as a tomato. “What the hell is going on here?” he thundered. “You will stop this! Stop it at this instant – this – this singing!”
“Let them be, Sergeant Danson,” Martin instructed. “That’s an order. We’re just keeping them company…and it’s keeping us ruddy warm, too, I might add!”

“Sir, how many times have I respectfully instructed you not to encourage the enemy with this celebration?” Danson’s hands were on his hips, and he was all but glaring at Martin. “It isn’t the done thing, sir.”

Martin turned to look at the man, struggling to keep an unprofessional smile from his face as he remembered Henry’s assertion that Danson would likely end up with coal in his stocking this year. “When was the last time you were engaged in a war against the Germans on Christmas Eve, Sergeant Danson?”

“It’s the principle, sir. We shouldn’t be fraternising with these men.”

“Sergeant, if it is a choice between fraternisation – as you call it – and having their heavy artillery shell our trenches as a way of ushering in Christmas Day, well, then, I’m quite happy to let this fraternisation go on for as long as the Germans are of a mind to indulge in it. Furthermore, you have made your point and your protest is noted, but I am your commanding officer, Sergeant, and I would appreciate no further lessons in warfare. What is happening is happening, and until I see a situation through which the enemy might seek to gain some advantage, I am of a mind to let it continue.”

Ever the professional soldier, Danson understood the order. “Permission to retire to my dugout, sir.”

“Granted.” Watching the crusty South African veteran depart, Martin decided that if there was a more unhappy man about the sudden Christmas cheer blossoming across the Western Front than Danson was, he had yet to show himself.

Soon, as the two groups of singers dueled back and forth in the most pleasant fight of the war thus far, Martin, who stood on the fire step and watched activities across No Man’s Land through a periscope, saw dozens of flickering candles appearing, their tiny flames moving in time with the weak breeze. When the British weren’t singing, Martin could hear the Germans, still singing songs, though they were mostly in their native tongue now, and he could only pick up on their cheerfulness and hope, rather than each word they sung.

A moon came out, and it brightened the sky. Distantly, over the British trenches to the south, a flare went off, a very festive combination of colours, red and green, shooting high into the sky, turning night into day for a very quick few moments, before the light faded. Whether it was someone’s idea of a joke or not, Martin wasn’t quite sure. He normally hated the flares, shot up to try and identify trench raids. When they burst high over No Man’s Land, the raiding party would freeze, playing dead as best they could, knowing that there would be curious German eyes watching, and that one movement in the sudden illumination would result in a torrent of machine gun fire, which Martin knew entirely too much about.

On this occasion, as the singing continued and the guns continued to stay silent, the flare faded without incident, and Martin rubbed his hands together, trying his best to keep the bitter cold at bay. Behind him, men came back and forth, sometimes literally having to drag their limbs through the squelching mud, which never seemed to disappear. There were some, like Danson, who seemed to be able to move effortlessly through it, as though it was a hard track. Others struggled mightily, and Martin fell somewhere in between.

The British carollers finished a rousing rendition of The Twelve Days of Christmas, and there was silence across the battlefield. Enough silence, in fact, that a very German voice could be heard calling out, “Merry Christmas, English!”

“Merry Christmas, Fritz,” one of the privates down from Martin called back. “I hope Father Christmas comes and visits!”

Through the periscope, Martin saw a new addition to what was fast becoming quite a Christmas wonderland. “They’ve got candles out now,” he said to Henry. “Looks rather beautiful, I must admit.”

In the continued silence, the German voice was at it again: “You sing well…for Englishmen!” The gentle taunt was delivered and then came laughter.

“As do you, for bloody Jerries,” Henry replied with a bark of delighted laughter.

Shortly thereafter, the carols began again, both sides singing robustly, as if trying to outdo the other. Martin moved a little way down the trench, to the shallow dugout that he’d fashioned upon arriving in this sector nearly six weeks before. It barely allowed him to curl up into something approaching the foetal position, and even then it was very cramped, but it was certainly better than standing ankle – sometimes, knee – deep in mud.

On the front line, Martin’s his life consisted of three regular places now: his dugout, the fire step and the captain’s bunker, which was Buckingham Palace compared, dug into the reverse wall, underground, with wooden planking holding it up. But Martin had a less-than-irrational fear of being caught in the dugout as it was shelled, and being buried alive, so he frequented it as little as possible.

With the voices of Henry’s carollers in his ear, Martin curled up as best he could, the blanket that he’d laid down now so dirty itself that it had almost become on with the earth. Nothing stayed clean here for very long: uniforms, hair, fingernails, everything got dirty and quickly, and there was no return, not whilst a man remained in the line. There wasn’t nearly enough warm water – hard to boil when it was raining, and whilst artillery rained – so en went without washing, thus promoting all sorts of disease, everything from dreaded trench foot to nits.

The slop that the Army passed off for rations was absolutely putrid, so stomach diseases were prevalent, as was general malnourishment. At least his dugout was dry and relatively free of anything unpleasant. It was as much of a miracle as Martin had gotten used to hoping for. No guns, no barked orders from Sergeant Danson…nothing but peaceful singing and, beyond that, blessed silence.

He was asleep in moments.

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