Authors: Robert Edric
Now the word sounded sour in his mouth, and Mercer wondered why he had bothered with this pointless correction.
âNo, of course,' Mathias said.
âGo on,' Mercer told him.
âThe wound in the boy's neckâ'
âIn “Adolf's” neck,' Jacob said.
âThe wound in his neck wouldn't stop bleeding. Perhaps something vital had been severed, I don't know. I stayed with him while others ran and rode past us. Someone threw me more bandages, but nothing else. I stupidly tried to give him water to drink, but he couldn't swallow it and was forced to spit it out with the blood he was already choking on. He begged me not to leave him. Not to not let him die, just not to leave him. Shells were already falling far ahead of us.'
âYour shells,' Jacob said to Mercer.
âShut up,' Mercer said, causing Jacob to smile.
âAnd against his own pleas there were others from the men â men I knew far better â running past us. I shouted to ask if there was anyone else prepared to stop and help him, but few did little more than pause, regain their breath and run on. A shell landed on the road directly ahead of me. I was showered with dirt and stones. Four or five men lay dead. He was yelling by then, insofar as he could form the words through his screams and the splashing of his blood. I tried to stop an empty half-track, but the driver veered off the road to avoid me and carried on going. I remember there was a solitary woman in the back of it looking out at me. Then one of my own sergeants â a man I trusted â knelt beside me and asked to look at the boy's
wounds. I showed him. I believed that here, at last, was someone prepared to help me. But instead he said that the boy was already as good as dead, and that I would be too if I didn't run. He pulled me to my feet. I remember I dropped the boy's head and that it hit the surface of the road with a knock. I started running, barely resisting the sergeant, who was pulling my arm.'
âWhat else could you reasonably do?' Mercer said.
âI could have stayed with him. I could have kept the pads pressed to his bleeding neck. I could have gathered more bandages. Like I said, I could perhaps have kept him alive long enough for someone else to help him.'
Jacob made a dismissive noise at hearing this.
âIt's what I believed,' Mathias said to him.
âYou still ran. You still saved your own skin. That sergeant wasn't pulling you away. You were doing your own running. If you believe otherwise, then you're fooling nobody but yourself.'
Mathias conceded this in silence.
âAnd did he die?' Mercer asked him.
Mathias shrugged.
âSo, for all you know, he might have been found and cared for and saved.'
âI don't believe it,' Jacob said disbelievingly. âFirst
he
tries to deceive himself, but cannot, and now
you
try to do the job for him and make an even bigger mess of it.'
âYou did what you could,' Mercer told Mathias.
âNo,' Jacob insisted. âHe did as little as his conscience would allow.'
Mercer could still not understand the man's hostility. âHe could have run past without stopping in the first place,' he said.
âI agree,' Jacob said. âAnd
that
would have been the more honest course of action. It is what you or I might have done under similar circumstances.'
âI doubt it,' Mercer said.
âAll this was when?' Jacob asked Mathias.
âThe end of June, two years ago.'
âThen it
is
what I would have done,' Jacob said.
âDid you ever try to find out what happened to the boy?' Mercer said, his words intended only to maintain a distance between the two men. Jacob showed no other signs of hostility; nor did Mathias signal his defensiveness by anything other than what he said.
âImpossible. I was taken prisoner two days later. The sergeant, too. He told me to stop worrying about the boy.'
âThe soldier,' Jacob said.
âFew others had liked him,' Mathias said. âHe was too earnest, too keen.'
âBecause
they
all knew the invasion was coming and that it would prove unstoppable.'
âPerhaps. But they stayed and fought until the time came to withdraw.'
Mercer waited for Jacob to say perhaps âto run', but he said nothing. Instead, he watched Mathias closely, and seeing this, Mercer better understood the nature and purpose of his testing hostility.
Jacob put a hand on Mathias's arm. âYou were no more responsible for his death than Captain Mercer here, sitting in the Italian sun under a lemon tree.'
âOnly for not having tried harder to save him,' Mathias said.
âAnd do you blame yourself more than all those others who ran straight past you, or does their indifference absolve them of all responsibility? How many other corpses did you run past during those days
that might have still been living men? Perhaps they were all alive. Perhaps you might have saved them all.' His hand remained on Mathias's arm.
âHe's right,' Mathias said to Mercer, wanting to ensure that no ill-will now existed between Mercer and Jacob, and to suggest to Mercer that he would not have raised the subject in Jacob's company if he had not been prepared for his companion's honest, if scathing, remarks.
A cry went up from the distant footballers, and all three men turned to look. It was unclear, at that distance, what had happened.
âGoal,' Jacob said.
There was no apparent order to the distant game â every man chased the ball in whatever direction it was kicked. A solitary figure stood against the building awaiting their assault on him.
âThat's Roland,' Mathias said. âConserving his energy.'
âFor what?' Jacob said. âMore digging?'
âFor his great plan of escape.' He stared at the man.
âSeriously?' Mercer asked him.
âNo, not seriously,' Mathias said, but too quickly to sound convincing.
The mob of men raced towards the building and the single figure was lost to view.
âPerhaps when you return home, perhaps then you'll be able to find out what happened to the boy,' Mercer suggested.
âI doubt learning that he survived, that he lived, would make him feel any better about what he did,' Jacob said. He leaned back on his elbows and looked up into the sky.
âWhatever happened, he gave the boy some comfort,' Mercer said.
This thought seemed not to have occurred to Mathias.
âSaint Mathias,' Jacob said, and hearing this, Mercer's first instinct was to shout at him to stop being so deliberately and pointlessly provocative, but before he could speak, Mathias himself said:
âThe apostle chosen to replace Judas Iscariot.'
âSaint Mathias the Remorseful,' Jacob added.
âThat's me,' Mathias said, and the two men burst into laughter, leaving Mercer feeling excluded by the sudden intimacy of this exchange.
â
Was
there a Saint Mathias?' he asked.
âApparently,' Jacob said. âThough some doubt exists in our half-remembered schooling as to the exact circumstances of his beatification.'
âOnly that Judas Iscariot was in some way involved,' Mathias said. âI knew none of this until our mournful friend here pointed it out to me. I doubt my parents had the faintest idea. My uncle Mathias was killed at Verdun. We held his memory sacred, but only at a local monument; his body was never recovered.'
âRemorse is not necessarily the self-indulgent commodity Jacob here would have us believe,' Mercer said.
Jacob lowered himself backwards off his elbows and slowly applauded the remark.
âIgnore him,' Mathias said.
âImpossible,' Mercer said, loud enough for Jacob to hear.
âBravo,' Jacob said.
In the distance, a further cry went up from the foot-ballers, and immediately afterwards, a siren sounded, calling them back to their work.
âFull-time,' Jacob said.
Mathias rose and brushed the earth and grass from
his legs. âGo home,' he said to Jacob, who shielded his eyes to look up at him. âWalk slowly and rest often.'
âYes, mother,' Jacob said.
âTell him,' Mathias said to Mercer, but Mercer knew as well as any of them that it was beyond him to tell the man to do anything. He repeated Mathias's words and Jacob rose from where he lay.
The siren sounded again and Mathias started running back to the others. He paused to call to Jacob that he would see him soon. Jacob raised his hand, but said nothing. Mathias resumed running.
âHow will I cope when he is finally made to return home?' Jacob said, jokingly, but with genuine concern in his voice â as much, Mercer imagined, for Mathias as for himself.
âI ought to be getting back, too,' Mercer said.
âNo man who dies in battle dies well,' Jacob said. â
Henry V
.'
âI know,' Mercer told him. âAnd any man who imagines war to be anything but a bloody, dirty business is a fool.'
âThe boy probably died in his arms. The sergeant will have seen it, even if Mathias chose not to.'
Mercer doubted this, but said, âProbably.'
On the runway, Mathias finally reached the others, and he drew them to him as though an invisible cord had been pulled through them.
Two days before the anticipated return of Elizabeth Lynch's husband, and as he again awaited the arrival of the lorries, a man arrived on a motorcycle and stood in front of the tower calling up for Mercer.
Mercer went out as the rider was unfastening his helmet and removing his heavy gauntlets. The man saluted him, and Mercer returned the gesture.
âI've been sent from Transport to let you know they won't be coming,' he said. He would clearly have preferred a written message to hand over than to have found the unwelcome words himself.
âWho won't be coming? The workers?'
âTransport wants a full inspection and service of the lorries. Turned up late last night. Got to be done, apparently. No arguments.'
âHow long will it take?'
âDay at the most,' the man said. âTwo at the outside.'
Mercer imagined the celebrations as the gathered workers were informed. âAnd in the meanwhile?'
âIn the meanwhile what?' The rider looked around
him at the workings. The site still looked more like one in the process of being demolished than one undergoing reconstruction.
âWhat am I supposed to do here?'
âCarry on as normal, I suppose, but without them,' the man said, shrugging.
Mercer guessed then that this messenger knew the workers and that he had already seen them prior to his journey from the town.
âTell Transport that I want them back tomorrow.'
âNot very likely,' the man said. âFriday.' Mercer shook his head.
âLook on the bright side,' the man said. âAnything found wrong with the lorries, it's bound to be fixed by Monday.'
Assuming the mechanics were prepared to work over the weekend
, Mercer thought, which was unlikely. âAre there any instructions for me?' he said. âFor what I might do without a workforce?'
âNobody said anything to me,' the man said. He lit a cigarette and unfastened the top of his jacket. âWhat you building here, anyway?'
Mercer started to explain to him about the new Coastguard Station.
âThat the sea, then?' the man said, interrupting him.
âThat's the sea,' Mercer said.
And the man, detecting this hostile note, said, âI was only asking, mate. Only trying to show some interest,' and he flicked away what remained of his cigarette, pulled on his helmet and fastened it, then pushed his hands into the gauntlets, doubling their size. He sat on his bike revving the engine for several minutes, and those few women who had not emerged from the houses at his appearance came out now and stood watching him. He left Mercer and rode
zigzagging over the uneven ground towards them.
Mercer watched as the younger women gathered around him. One of these climbed onto the seat behind him and he rode her in a jolting circle. He offered the same to the others, but no one accepted. He sat with them for several minutes longer before finally returning to Mercer and pulling up close in front of him. A cloud of dust settled around the two men.
The rider said something which Mercer did not hear over the noise of the engine â something which, apparently, required no answer, for the instant the man had finished speaking, he turned and left again, raising his hand to the women as he went.
Mercer searched the small group beside the houses. Neither Elizabeth Lynch nor Mary was among them. And only then, as the noise of the bike faded in the distance, did it occur to him that they might have heard the rider upon his arrival and imagined him to come in connection with the returning man. He wished he could have gone to them and explained the messenger's mission without this lingering audience.
At midday, he left the deserted site and walked to the airfield. Here, too, it seemed as though little was happening.
He was walking along the centre of the half-demolished runway when someone called to him. A man rose from behind a roofless bunker and called again. He recognized Mathias and went to him.
Upon reaching him, Mercer found Mathias in the company of six others, all of them sitting in the shade of the bunker wall out of the sun, their picks and hammers scattered beside them.
Mathias made a brief introduction. The men were all prisoners of war, some awaiting their repatriation, and some, like Mathias, who had applied for permission to stay, and whose futures had not yet been decided. All of them spoke some English; all of them knew who he was.
âWe have our own transport,' one of them told Mercer when he told them about the lorries.
âWe will leave early,' Mathias said. âThey told us
there was a day's work in breaking up this section of the runway in readiness for the bulldozers, but we finished it in only a few hours.'