Thursday, July 26, 2012

savage island 2


It’s a tradition

Like every eldest male in his family, Bill had wanted to join up, to serve, to contribute, and to honour his family’s military history.  Since records have been scribed and portraits hung, the Cuthbursons had dutifully fought for king, queen or country.   The family had prospered and suffered equally for their resolve and Bill sensed that weave of events and actions had bound him to continue the history.   He took a sip and reflected on the remembrance day four years ago.

The sun that day glinted pride off the medals the old soldier had pinned to his blazer pocket.  The crowd watched respectfully as he’d pushed through his pain on the march, up the rise and into his village square.  Bill could see in his grandfather’s set face that the tears in his eye were not born from forcing his seized joints to step forward again and again, they were the tears from the grief of lost sons, dead friends and broken marriages.  There was however, behind the pain, still that steely resolve locked into that wizened countenance.  A resolve burning him to march with his last breath, with honour and without regard to self, all for the glory of victories past and the fight for right.  It was this paternal exemplar that drove the continuing Cuthburson legacy of militia enlistment.  Bill’s son Will had stood beside him that 11th day, at attention, his parade uniform pressed and his unadorned chest swelled with bravado.

Not for this latest William Cuthburson would be the rat-putrid and fetid trenches of Europe, nor the ocean-locked solitude and tactical blundering of the Falklands.  No, young Will would be forever aware of the ditch or mound beside a desert road, cautious of a welcoming resident, permanently watching the back of his buddy and command.  A degree course in paranoia locked in an oven of discontent would be Will’s lot, and Bill knew it would scar the lad and taint his life forever.   

The memory of that 11 November morning in 2008 was today playing on Bill’s mind as the BBC news banner rolled across the screen.  11/11/08 was the last time the three warrior Cuthbersons had shared a drink at the local, the old man quietly lamenting the loss of his eldest son, the young soldier espousing the invincibility of technologies in modern warfare, and Bill was there, caught between a sense of pride, of loss and with a gnawing fear for his son’s wellbeing.   Their parting was cursory after a few drinks, the old man was taken back to the home, young Will put on the bus back to barracks and Bill had wandered home to his dank flat to ponder again through a whisky clouded cut-glass lens.  All of them had shared a hug and a ‘see you soon’ back at the pub, knowing that they would.  

But they had not.

The old man had passed in his sleep and young Will was posted to Kabul on the same day.  Bill received a voicemail from his ex-wife saying she was sad to learn of the old man’s death and despite her fears, she wished their son well. There was a soft kindness in her words Bill had no idea how to respond to, so he didn’t. 

 What he did was have a drink and remember.   He remembered the fear of exocets and the scream of air support as he had hunkered down in the grasses with the winter wind whipping his kit .  He remembered the mortar thud vaporising half of his sergeant in the ditch beside him and he remembered vomiting as he charged forward to the next hillock, closer to the enemy but away from the mortar’s sweep.  It was the only memory he could still be sure of from his service, the drugs and the abuse he had delivered on himself and his wife had in time erased those Falkland horrors.  He wasn’t sure if he drank now to remember or to forget.

Through the whisky the elaborate paintings of Bill’s grand forebears looked down incongruously from the stained walls of his tiny flat.  His eye fell once more to the painting of the young be-medalled officer who had been his father, a man he’d never known other than from stories told by others.  The husband who his mother could not speak of without grief choking her words.  The father whose memory he had idolised and on whose behalf Bill had gone to war to deliver a Cuthburson retribution on a different enemy.

There was no logic in warfare, the Germans had killed Bill’s father, the Argentinean’s would die.  

But they did not suffer at his hand.  It was not the war won on the field, it was his battle lost at home.  For every life stolen in trenches, on beaches, in air and water there are ten at home destroyed by loss, or worse, by the return of a cracked and broken sub-hero.  Bill’s father, he thought, was in that way lucky to have caught a friendly cannon round in Ypres.  The fight when Bill returned home was much longer and less clearly defined than the mission away, the lessons learned in strategy, defence and attack, meaningless in the lounge room.   The families of veterans may expect to be beaten or ignored but they can not expect normality from a returning warrior.  There is no rule, no school, the soldier shall cope. 

The soldier will most likely return to war where his skills are more attuned.  Bill was not fit to return.

This last November, 2011, in the icy rain, young Will had worn the old man’s medals proudly on his right.  Father and son shared a gentle ale before Will returned for his fifth tour, a double back to back.  The young Major Will Cuthburson prefers active postings to the alternative, and he has a legacy to honour.

So today, a warm July Monday, Bill slumps in his armchair, drinks his whisky re-reads the banner headlines.  He is not shocked, not awed, not even convinced.  He hears how it was that Syria has had the  Weapons of Mass Destruction all along. 

Nothing has changed.

Every horror or conflict near or far, every economic or moral cause still exudes the same nationalistic call for loyalty.  With fervour and outrage, a sense of decency, for the sake of the monarch, for peace and the rights of all humans, Bill’s country will voice its stake.  This small and savage island will again and forever send it’s best to serve, to suffer, to die, or worse, to return home.         

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