In the war torn Pacific islands, tensions are brewing. As the platoon makes it's way across the island, something has to give. But what will break first: The men? Or their entire reality?
Author's note: Warnings for the use of graphic imagery and discriminatory language.
Click
Author's note: Warnings for the use of graphic imagery and discriminatory language.
Click
By
A.M Carver
“You should have seen it.
Ten whole gold teeth, all sitting pretty in the mouth of a Nip.”
Murphy grinned, counting
each of the teeth between his calloused fingers.
“Dumb bastard. Small
fortune in his mouth, and he tries to run a rifle through the Fifth Marines.”
Slipping the pouch back
into his pocket, he patted it three times, once for each of it’s less than
willing benefactors. Jose shuddered, despite the jungle’s all-consuming heat.
Closing his eyes, he tried to shape the darkness around him into the soft walls
of the cinema. Forget the Pacific, he was listening to the two-bit villain of a
B reel gangster flick, rolling a cigarette for the short walk home with a girl
on his arm. The army issued cigarettes would never compare.
“Credit to him, he almost
had me. Damn near took a bayonet to the head before I got him in my sights.”
Raising his rifle, Murphy
mocked up the killing shot, squeezing an air trigger as he mouthed the crack of
an M1 Carbine.
“Right through the jaw
and out the other side. No sir, Tojo weren’t looking too pretty after that.
Still, shame I didn’t aim a little up. Could have been another few gold ones in
there.”
The Sarge slapped at the
mosquitos sucking him dry, throwing a glance back to Murphy.
“Well ain’t that a crying
shame.”
“For sure.”
“A crying shame he didn’t
run your clod-hopper ass through. Now shut up and fall in, lest Tojo decides to
finish the job.”
Jose couldn’t help but
grin. The sergeant may have been a hard ass, but he knew how to keep Murphy in
line. Most of the time. Quietening down, Murphy fell back a couple steps as
they made their way towards the clearing, clipping Jose with the butt of his rifle.
He bristled, both shoulders tensing before pushing it out in one cold sigh; he
wasn’t going to give that asshole the satisfaction. Not again.
Jose took a deep breath,
thinking back to their deployment. ‘Give me three days hard fighting and we’ll
have it done’ was the promise given as they’d prepped on deck. Three days and
this speck of dirt would be theirs, Amen. By day 26, Jose wasn’t so sure. Fingering
the rosary wound round his dog tags, he just hoped the worst was over. The
airfield was gone and the ocean was theirs; how long could a thousand starving
men hold?
The sarge made a fist and
the squad stopped dead. Measuring every breath, each man slowly lowered
themselves to the ground, checking their equipment. It was a rare luxury; the
usual indication of an enemy presence was the loss of the pointman’s head.
“Pullman, Baker, Luna.”
The shudder returned as
Jose moved up the line. Sarge studied the treeline a moment as all three men
crouched round, dreading whatever was about to come out of his mouth.
“Possible gunner on the
ridge. Baker and Luna, you move on left. Pullman on right. Quick and clean,
only fire if you have to. The rest of you, covering fire on my mark. Go.”
Shedding their packs, the
three men formed up and struck out into the darkness. He knew that later, the
fear would come, cold and overwhelming, wrapping around him in the dirty rags
of his blanket as he tried in vain to sleep. But in that moment, Jose was no
longer a factor within himself. Jose Luna shed his name on the black sands of
the beach. He was far away, an observer to the machine that now ran
unquestioning into the jungle; a drilled and vicious tool at the disposal of
the USMC.
Cusping the lip of the
ridge, he formed up with Baker before rolling into the trench. Cut clean across
the brow of the hill, the dark scar marked the edge of the jungle. In the
fields beyond, dirty wounds peppered the remains of a sugar cane field, stripped
bare by the hunger of the men defending it. They walked the trench, every step a
calculation; they’d all seen the booby traps that ate men alive, tumbling fast
into a slow death.
“Where the hell are
they?”
Jose placed a finger to
his lips, indicating towards a crook in the line; likely a gun emplacement.
“On my mark. You take
left, I’ll take right. Kill anything that moves.”
Baker nodded.
“Mark.”
In a flurry of movement,
the two men rounded the corner, rifles raised.
“Jesus…”
If there had been an
emplacement, it was long gone. The nose of a shell had found it’s mark, carving
the earth around it like butter. A twisted spear of metal hung limp from the
crater’s edge, the possible remains of a rifle. The man who had been holding it
was nowhere to be found.
Raising his hands over
the cusp, Baker signalled to the rest of the squad to move up. One by one they
skirted the edge of the hole, each studying the result of a direct hit and quietly
praying it would never be themselves. Jose moved to pull himself out, lest he
summoned the very beast which did it. His fingers sunk into the loose dirt
around the crater’s edge as Murphy kicked something. The cold lump thudded of
his helmet, landing in his hands. Jose stared at the severed foot, pieces of
the boot still attached. He yelled, losing his grip as he fell back into the
crater, batting the thing away from him.
“Luna! Calm the fuck
down.”
The rough hands of
Pullman yanked his tangled comrade out, the cold lump falling back into the
dirt below.
“It’s okay buddy. Just a scrap
of Jap.”
Murphy laughed as they
ripped Jose from the trench, dirty hands trembling as he tried to wipe the now cold
blood from his fingers.
“Damn Luna! At least I
was only taking teeth.”
Jose rounded, shrugging
off Pullman as he turned to face Murphy.
“What’s the matter, Spic?”
The grin was back. “Gonna shoot me too?”
“That’s enough outta you,
Mick.”
The sarge smacked the
back of Murphy’s helmet, muttering something about Catholics as Jose’s fingers
locked tight around the trigger guard. It was scary how much he hated Murphy. More
than the Japs and their artillery. More than the Californian drill sergeant who
burned their letters home because they weren’t written in English, or the
sounds Cooper made as his lungs filled with blood. He hated him because in the quiet that
followed, he wondered if he was right. Pullman led him away, back towards their
packs as the Sargent weighed up their next move.
“C’mon man, fuck Murphy.
He’s just trying to bait your biscuit.”
Gathering up his pack,
Jose reassembled himself into the man who charged fearless into jungles. Pullman
struggled with his straps, a spaghetti mess around his shoulders.
“Can’t believe that Mick
prick. Bringing up Cooper like that. Where does he get off?”
The clang of Jose’s
helmet hitting the floor made Pullman jump.
“Don’t you dare. Don’t
you dare even mention him to me.”
The words landed like a
slap.
“Jesus bud, alright.” He
paused a moment, looking him over. “You gotta stop beating yourself up about it.”
Jose’s hands moved to the
straps, but whichever way he pulled the tangle ran deeper. Letting loose a
growl, he snatched up his rifle, roughly helping Pullman to his feet. They
stopped a moment, the noise of the jungle once again enveloping them. Pullman
saw the tremble of Jose’s hand, still stained between the fingers.
“I need a favor.”
Pullman looked up,
surprised at the seemingly calm request.
“Are you gonna play it
cool?”
“In time. But before all
that, I need you to keep the sarge busy minute.”
“Oh, God damn it…”
“Listen to me. Murphy crossed
a line and he needs to know that. So I’m going to sock that Pendejo whilst you distract the sarge.
By the time he knows what hit him, we’ll already be back in formation.”
Pullman shot him a
withering look.
“You do realise that’s
not going to solve anything?”
Jose grinned, but there
was nothing pleasant about it. Pullman looked away; it reminded him too much of
Murphy.
“True, but it’s gonna
make me one real happy sonofabitch. Now c’mon.”
Tugging Pullman by the
shoulder, the two ran to catch up with the squad, now cresting the hill.
Falling into formation, fourteen pairs of boots descended on the sugar cane
field.
“Find your balls back
there, Luna?”
Jose smiled at Murphy as
he saw Pullman glance back at them. With a slight nod, he moved forward to query
the sarge about a navigational matter.
“What you grinning at,
Spic? Find another foot to keep?”
The butt of Private
Luna’s rifle struck Murphy’s helmet with a gratifying smack, sending him
tumbling into the dark water of the sugar cane field. Sputtering for a moment,
Murphy scrambled to his feet, fist clenched as he launched himself at Jose.
“You filthy fucking beaner!”
The fist slammed into
Jose’s chin, hot streaks of light dancing before his eyes. Falling back into
the mud, he could barely hold Murphy off him, both thrashing like wild animals
as blow after blow was thrown.
“Go to hell, you Mick son
of a bitch! And take your fucking gold teeth with you!”
Every word he’d ever
wanted to say melted in his veins and he pushed, pushed so hard he thought he’d
crack the sky. Murphy tumbled backwards into the dark water, his roar piercing
the hot quiet of the night. The sergeant was yelling, others were moving to
break them apart. Picking himself up, Murphy stumbled sideways, a crooked
finger aimed square at Jose, advancing on the Private still scrambling in the
mud.
Click.
One hot flash of light,
and he was gone. In the darkness, men fell around screaming, clutching fresh
wounds. Jose blinked, a thin trickle of blood running past his eyes.
“Mines! Nobody move!”
The Sargent froze in
place, eyes wild. Murphy was gone, a gently steaming patch in the muddy water
where he’d stood not a moment ago. Deckland
was injured, shaking as he clutched the blossoming patches of red appearing
through his shirt. Smith sat dazed on his ass in the cold water. The other men
drew quickly into themselves, unwilling to move a muscle lest they summoned
another.
“Wilson, check Deckland. Slowly!
Where is our entry point?”
The squad looked in every
direction at once, but the dark waters of the sugar cane field covered every
step. Whichever way they’d come in, it was lost in the panic. Pullman gathered
his thoughts, glancing back towards the crater where they’d come from.
“I think it was around here
Sargent!”
“Good man! Now everyone,
slow as fucking molasses. We retrace
our steps. We get out of this field alive. Understood?”
Each man nodded in turn,
except for Lopez, still sat in the shin deep water.
“Lopez! Goddamit. Wilson,
what’s the situation?”
“Shrapnel Sarge. Doesn’t
seem deep, but these two are gonna need a minute. I suggest-“
He fell silent as they
all clocked it. The deep thump of distant artillery, low yet unmistakable. No
man moved, praying it was for somebody else. Anybody else.
“Incoming!”
The whistle was
unmistakable; the shells were for them.
“Move it! Retrace the
line, get to the trees!”
The dark of the field
evaporated as it struck, ripping mud and material alike free from the earth and
showering down in burning rain. Jose scrabbled from the mud as each man ran
crazed to the trees, fragments of their world flung violently into the sky.
Anything was deadly now, from the grass to the dog tags on their necks. Jose
thought only of the safety of the crater as his foot plunged into the muddy
water below.
Click.
In an instant, everything
went quiet for Jose. The men rushing by were shadows on his windowsill, smog in
a Los Angeles morning. Even the splinters, now biting deep into his feet,
seemed far away, tiny in the distance below him. He thought of his Grandma and the
bar in San Diego. He thought of Cooper. He thought about a lot of things in not
much time at all.
In small pulses, his body
came back to him. One nerve at a time he stepped back into his own skin, still
mostly in one piece. His hands shook, patting down his leg in slow, deliberate
motions. It was only when he felt the hot trickle of his own blood that he was
back in the sugar cane field. One foot in the mud. One foot through the rotting
lid of an anti-tank mine.
The furious roar of a
shell filled his ears, detonating in the mud. He battled the creases in his
belly, every bit of training in his head telling him to duck and run as fast as
possible. He tasted copper, blood in his mouth from biting his tongue. The men
around him sounded distant now, apparitions in his eyeline as they fled the
scene.
He was breathing fast.
Way too fast. Fighting every screeching instinct, he forced his lungs to slow,
counting down each deep breath in his head. He thought back to his brother’s
shop, oil stains on his jumpsuit as he counted inventory under his breath. He
risked another lungful. This was all it was, just inventory to be counted.
Screws, not final moments. He stood as still as he could, counting screws in a
sugar cane field.
The explosions were
moving further away now, ripping through the dense life of the jungle as they
chased his unit back down the hills, to beaches and dugouts. In a few minutes
more, it was as if they were never there. The crash of the waves far below made
him feel as if he were floating, a lone ghost above the thick life of the sugar
cane. Above him, the stars rippled out across a black night’s sky, empty save
for the thick sliver of a half-formed moon.
He kept counting. The
fact he was still alive was a miracle in itself, but he didn’t feel blessed yet.
The cold water of the field flooded his boots, wincing as the loose mud swirled
inside open wounds. Still, he did not move.
“Dios, have mercy.” he
whispered, desperately willing his leg to stop shaking. “C’mon you bastard!”
Each word made him feel sick to his bones, like any misplaced syllable would
tip the balance of life and death. “Dios. Dios, please…”
It was like this for a
long time; a man alone in the darkness, quietly whispering to god through his
boot. The shaking subsided, spreading elsewhere as he stood in soaking clothes.
He could feel it, below the surface of the water. The wooden box that had eaten
his foot now clung to his ankle, splinter teeth digging deep as he could feel
the charge just below his toes.
“Release me.” Jose hissed
between his teeth. He wanted more than anything to yank his foot out,
desperately trying to pull free without moving much at all. “God fucking dammit!”
He could feel them now,
the hard sobs that wanted to rack his chest, his body rejecting all the filth
and horror he had swallowed. His body burned, muscles softly shivering as every
piece of pent tension shed the raw heat of energy it needed to expel. He was
locked, every piece of him held fiercely still through will alone. More than
anything, he wanted to lie down. All it would cost him were his legs.
A glint in the moonlight
caught his eye. A foreign object, floating on the dark water around him. The
sob subsided, replaced by an equally dangerous sensation. Jose couldn’t help
it. It was just too damn perfect.
A single gold tooth,
floating past his boots.
Jose slowly clutched his
sides. He didn’t want to move, didn’t want to laugh at the grim token of his
ex-squad mate sailing by, now oddly beautiful in the half light. A single lurch
of his chest and he would die, another set of teeth set to float forever in the
moonlight.
“You sneaky bastard.”
Jose couldn’t help but smile. “Even when you’re dead you’re still trying to
fuck me over.” He wanted to laugh and vomit all at once. “Well Murphy, you can
go to hell. I’m not gonna stop until I’m out of this godforsaken hole in the
ground. And then?” Jose fought back a grim chuckle. “I’m gonna leave you and
all your bastard teeth here to rot.”
He spat at the tooth
floating free. It span on the surface of the water, bobbing towards the sunken beast
on Jose’s foot.
“Go back to your grave, Pendejo.”
The tooth stopped. Jose
stared as it stopped dead on the water, frozen in place. Twitching, it slowly
began to turn. Jose bit his tongue, mouth like ash as he watched it begin to
reverse its passage, slipping back between the sugarcane shoots.
He heard it then. It was
quiet, almost imperceptibly so. Straining to hear it, he pinpointed the sound
to the dense thickets just within his eyeline, their thick roots coming to a
snarled close just beside his boots. It was a soft gurgling, intermitted with
the rasp of harsh air. Something was breathing, even as Jose dared not. A
single word dared push past his lips, a desperate need to know what his mind
was screaming out.
“Cooper?”
The wheezing stopped. Standing
silent in the moonlight, Jose couldn’t comprehend. Cooper was dead, lungs
pierced back on the black sands. That was twenty-five days ago, when they’d
buried him with the rest. But that sound; Jose was trembling now. He knew it
all too well. It was the sound of someone drowning in their own lungs. Jose carefully
shook his head clear. Dread and relief rising in his chest, Jose knew that it
was someone else from his squad, now suffering the same fate.
“Deckland? That you
buddy?”
The gurgling wheeze
picked up again, louder now. Jose braced himself; whatever had gotten the poor
bastard, it had gotten him good. He couldn’t bring himself to look at whichever
one of his team lay blasted in the mud behind the suagrcane. Even if he could
move, run to him now with bandages and the sweet release of morphine, it would
do no good. With the amount of liquid in his lungs, he would die before he even
made it to the treeline. Taking a deep breath, Jose called once more into the
darkness.
“It’s okay Deckland! It’s
okay man. The squad’s gonna be back for us real soon, you hear?”
Jose gripped the stock of
his Carbine, squeezing and releasing as he thought of what to say to the man
dying meters away from himself. At best, he had minutes to live. Jose didn’t
know how much longer he had himself.
“Deckland! If that’s you
man, I need you to move.”
The gurgling ceased as
Jose held his breath. A soft splash in the waters beside him; Deckland could
hear him.
“Good to have you with us
buddy! Now listen up: I’m currently tap dancing on a landmine, so I can’t
exactly move. What kind of shape you in? Can you move?”
The thick burble of fluid
made Jose want to cover his ears and pretend he was back in the cinema. He had
to act fast. Deckland was going to die, but if Jose could get him over, he
could free him before he did. The thought made him shudder, but what choice did
he have now?
“Splash once for yes. Don’t
if you can’t.”
The silence was crushing.
All Jose could hear was the slow wheeze of a collapsing lung, painfully aware
that any and all noise could be answered with a Japanese bullet from the
treeline.
“Keep it together
Deckland! You hear me? C’mon big guy…”
Jose almost jumped at the
sudden splash, the moist wheeze growing louder as he thrashed.
“It’s okay! It’s okay
buddy. We’re gonna fix you up, better than new. Just gotta do what I say,
alright?”
The splashing grew quiet
as the gasps of a shredded lung rose to take their place.
“I’m going to get you
some morphine, okay? The real good shit. Soon as I do, I need you to get over
here and get me outta this. Got it?”
The gurgling heave of his
comrade was followed by a single splash. Jose took a deep breath, his heart roaring
inside his still frame. He might just make it yet. Reaching slowly into his pack,
Jose carefully loosened one of the morphine syrettes he’d taken from the dead
medic, threading his bayonet through the wire loop pin.
“Good man! Here’s what we
gotta do: got a dose of morphine on my bayonet. Gonna move it close to you as I
can, then all you got to do is reach out and take it. Clear?”
More splashing. He had got
the message. Now came the tricky part.
Carefully as he could,
Jose started to slide his free leg across the thick skin of mud below the
water. Every movement felt like a mile as Jose willed it away from his body,
towards the thick roots of the cane. After an age of inches, his toes pressed
up against the side of his boot; he had a brace.
Shifting every aching
muscles, long since numb with the effort of stillness, Jose began to twist
himself to the left, following the arch of his leg as he shifted his weight
across. Any loss of balance, any slip in the loose mud and he knew he’s be
atoms, raw mass flung into the air and rained back into the earth. Grimacing,
he twisted his aching spine towards his fallen comrade, cursing the betrayal of
his body with every soft spasm. With a terrible click, he made his mark, extending
the laced rifle out into the sugarcane.
“Behind you Deckland!
Just gotta grab it.”
A flutter of hope rose in
Jose’s chest as he saw the thicket rustle. In the cold moonlight, the outline
of a hand pushed its way up through the grass, towards the blunt relief of
morphine. As it emerged from the thicket, Jose froze.
Something was wrong. Deeply
wrong. The hand that emerged wasn’t just burned; it was destroyed. The flesh of
the fingers was almost all but gone, loose stands peeling from the shredded
remains of the palm as it quivered in the half light. The gurgling wheeze
intensified as the raw meat of the fingers strained, reaching out towards the
morphine. Jose bit his tongue to stop himself from yelling out. The ravaged
flesh on the back of its hand almost seemed to be moving.
Reaching the syrette, the
mess of a hand twitched, the fingers trying to curl in short, violent spasms.
Jose held steady as the thing curled around his bayonet, the precious dosage
now secured in his palm. Taking a deep breath, Jose squeezed his eyes shut.
“You got it man. You got
it.”
He waited a moment for
the hand to retract, feel the weight loose from his rifle as Deckland took the
package. It was a long shot. Deckland was fucked up worse than Jose had ever
dared to imagine. But unless he did something, they were both going to die in
this worthless puddle. Opening both eyes slowly, he peered back into the
darkness, his eyes adjusting to the half-light.
The mess that was
Deckland’s hand wasn’t reaching for the morphine. Each stripped finger had
wound round his bayonet, gripping the spine. He could see the filthy blade
sinking into each finger, pushing through the mess of blood and bone as it
locked itself to his rifle.
Barley fighting the
instinct the flinch, Jose could only watch in dumb silence as it began to grip,
curling its fingers into the biting tip of the blade. The slow sounds of
something being ruptured made Jose gag, a thick rivulet of blood running across
the steel. Steadying himself on his free foot, Jose inched the blade from
between its fingers. The hand lurched, two fingers dropping with a sickening
splash. The arm fell, joining the severed fingers in the muddy water as it
spasmed, writhing in the filth. Clamping his lips together, Jose breathed fast
and heavy, trying to stop himself from detonating.
“Deckland! Deckland, I’m
sorry!”
His hands shook worse
than ever as he realised what he’d done. In blind, stupid panic he’d hurt
Deckland even worse, possibly ruining any chance he had of getting out of here
alive. He listened intently in the darkness, desperate to know if Deckland
could still make it over. The wet gurgle of his breathing had stopped as
silence sank back into the field around him. The deep ache of sobs rose again
in Jose’s chest as he realised it was over. Deckland had died of shock or of
his injuries. He took a rattling breath, carefully pulling his shirt to his
mouth as he silently screamed.
It was then that he heard
it. Rising from the tangle of the thicket, low and steady. Jose stared wildly
into the darkness, head cranking round in measured movements as he desperately
searching for the source of the laughter now rising all around him. Like air
escaping mud, it echoed from the thicket, filling the night as Jose scrambled
desperately for a source.
“Who’s there?!” Jose
cocked the M1, scanning the thick growth around him. The laughter died down, a
wet chuckle making him shiver uncontrollably despite his best efforts to remain
still. He’d never heard a sound like it. A sudden splash came from the thickets
around him, sending ripples across his boots as he fought his instinct to run.
Raising the rifle slowly, he twisted his body in inches, carefully pushing the
limits of his vision. The pale scraps of flesh burned white in the moonlight,
as Jose saw the arm. Worse still, what it was doing.
It was dragging something
through the thicket. He squeezed his eyes shut again, counting inventory. He
desperately fought off every other memory, rooted to the spot amongst the
sugarcane as the thicket beside him trembled with movement. Raising his rifle
with painful care, Jose cocked it nice and slow. A shot would be a risk,
jolting his body with the recoil. He clenched his teeth together; if it was a
Jap, he was dead anyhow. Slowly, he opened his eyes.
Writhing in the
moonlight, the ruined face of Murphy was grinned, flesh pulsing and shifting as
it slowly sewed itself together. The jaw was snapped, one side of his face
slumping away as loose skin fluttered over the tangle of teeth embedded at
unnatural angles. The nose was shorn almost off entirely, the cartilage blown
open all the way back to the bridge as the wound trailed up through the left
eye. Shifting his head in a short, snapping jerk, Murphy’s glazed pupils were
staring right into Jose’s. He smiled, a trail of dark liquid leaking from his
mouth.
“Private Luna.”
The loose flesh twisted,
Murphy pushing his broken face into the wild semblance of a smile. Reaching
into the dirt, he collected up his fingers, examining them for a moment.
“Odd kinda trophy to
take, Jose.”
With a sudden lurch, he
dragged his body forward. The body was mangled, blown apart at every seam and
joint. Both legs were missing, shorn off midway down the thigh. The left arm
hung limp at the shoulder, twitching loose in the tattered remains of his
sleeve. Across his body, Murphy’s skin writhed as if riddled with maggots,
bubbling beneath the surface as he dragged himself closer. The rifle shook in
Jose’s fingers as he willed himself to move, escape the nightmare that was
lurching slowly upon him. The wet gurgle of Murphy’s laugh made his guts churn.
“Nothing to say, Jose?”
The grin was back, pushing the curtains of his cheeks apart. “Not gonna make
your peace for all this?”
He couldn’t move; he
could barely breathe. With a rattling gasp, Murphy raised his arm, slowly
pushing it into the mud.
“Just as well. No real
sorry gonna fix this.” He snorted, a clump of wet matter dislodging from the
hole in his face. His skin was twisting, melding itself together in rough
patches. The vague semblance of a nose was reconstituting itself from the mud
and torn sinew around it. He drew his lips together and spat. A fragment of
tooth fell gracelessly into the dark waters below.
“Doesn’t even matter if
you did. Nothing matters now, Jose.”
The screaming impulses of
his muscles and mind finally broke free, coughing up a single sentence.
“You’re not real.”
The wheezing mess of
Murphy’s laugh made Jose’s finger curl viciously around the trigger, squeezing
it dangerously tight. Every inch of his skin crawled. Murphy’s did the same.
“Oh, I’m real as they
come boy. Every blasted scrap of me, back from the depths.”
He reached out the remnants
of his arm, the loose meat of his fingers curling into a fist. With a twisted
jolt of muscle, he extended a finger, aimed squarely at the man trapped before
him.
“Hell is real, Jose. Hell
is real and it’s worse than anything we could ever have imagined.”
The grim visage of his
smile cracked the corners of his mouth, loose bone shifting beneath the flesh.
Something crawled beneath his cheek.
“That’s where I’m taking
you, Jose. That’s where I’m taking you, tonight.”
Every fibre of Jose’s
body was on fire, the burning need to move, shoot, do anything at all to get
out. It took every screw in his inventory just to raise the rifle, steadying
himself against the roots of the sugarcane once more. The thing before him
tumbled forward, loose skin gently dripping into the water below.
“A lot can be forgiven in
war, Jose. Whole reason we prayed together, I guess. Men who’ve filled whole
cemeteries can still find redemption for the right price. But us?”
It grinned, Murphy’s
features swirling like paint across his bones.
“There’s no forgiveness
for true Catholic sinners like us Jose. No mercy for the rapists who seek no
redemption, traitors or cowards who send believers to die in their place. See,
what I did was bad. Lord knows I spent my redemption long before this all
started. But you Jose? You killed your own. Bullet through the back of his
lungs, let him bleed his last right in front of you. Know what they did to Cain
for that?”
His whole mouth was
shifting, twisting and rippling as bones wound back into themselves.
“God never let him die.”
The crack of Jose’s rifle
tore through the darkness. Murphy’s smile held but a moment, his face
constricting as the flesh fell still. All at once he tumbled face first into
the muddy water. Jose dared not breathe. He counted each second, eyes locked to
the ragged spectre of blood and bone now floating in the dark waters below.
Pulling in the sweet
night air into his lungs, Jose devoured each breath, his whole body racked with
deep, heaving shakes. A thin wisp of smoke rose from the barrel, coiling around
the shivering man, leg still locked in place as he slowly fell silent. He
listened. Jose listened harder than he’d ever had to, waiting in numb horror
for the rasping to start again.
Minutes passed. The rifle
stayed locked on the figure of Murphy, still aimed squarely at the back of his
head as he floated towards him. The slightest twitch, the merest hint that he
was still somehow alive and Jose would not hesitate to empty every single round
into him. The sights shook all over the place as he steadied his breathing,
thinking it through.
It wasn’t real. The mine
beneath his feet, that was real. The shells falling from the sky were real.
They were evil, the worst excesses of cruelty and slaughter that spread like a
cancer through the minds of diseased men, great and terrible men who dreamt of
death in all it’s forms; but they were real nonetheless. The body before him
wasn’t. Couldn’t be. Jose stared at the gnarled corpse floating by his feet. He
was in shock. He was in shock from the shells and the death and everything else
his mind rejected on this hellish little island. He’d been in shock from the
moment the bullet had pierced Cooper’s lung and he’d been marching with it
since. He was back in the cinema, only this time watching a horror film that
just wouldn’t stop. Jose squeezed his eyes shut. The guilt was eating him alive
and his mind was next. Murphy was not back from the dead. He was a corpse. Just
another ragged body in a field far from home that Jose had dreamt into a monster.
With a sigh cracked clean in half, he tried to push it out of him, purge
himself of every shame they’d made him carry. Of every sin he’d taken upon
himself.
A bubble broke the
surface of the water. The flow reversed. The shivering horror worked its way
through Jose as bubble after filthy bubble rose from the depths, the torso
beneath him starting to convulse, the foul spark of life reigniting in a broken
machine. Jose did not hesitate.
The rifle roared between
him and the corpse as each bullet found it’s mark. One clean in the back of the
head. Two more to the heart. The body twisted, writhing as each round ripped
through its flesh. Jose was screaming. Pushing every bit of fear and revulsion
from the fire in his lungs, Jose screamed in every language he knew, the
guttural roar of a caged beast. Each knuckle popped white as Jose clutched them
round the stock, rifle spent and smoking in his hands. His eyes were wide, wild
in the half-light.
The corpse was still
twitching.
“Die! Just fucking die!”
Blinking back hot tears,
Jose swung the rifle like a club, bringing it down straight into the back of
Murphy’s skull. He didn’t care if he set off the beast beneath his feet. In
that moment, all he wanted was to see Murphy die before he did. The half-formed
bone let loose a crack louder than the rifle shots before it, giving way to the
deep pulp inside as the stock made contact. Every breath felt as if it were
taken from a great distance, Jose gasping as he pulled the bloodied stock back,
clenching the barrel as he rose to strike once more.
The savage howl broke the
surface of the water as Murphy lunged from the mud, battered arms flailing
wild. The torn flesh of his fingers found their mark, each jagged nail sunk
into the back of Jose’s legs. For a moment, they screamed together, a howling roar
of fear and triumph. The rifle crashed down again into Murphy’s head, the thick
stock inverting the shape of the head as it became wedged between the two
plates of exposed bone. Fluid oozed from both eye sockets as it raised himself
up, fingers sinking deep into Jose’s flesh as the twisted remains of Murphy’s
face pulled close to his own.
“Look at me! Look at me Jose!”
The gurgling gash of
mouth flapped loose, revealing the nest of teeth inside.
“A thousand burning years
in the blink of an eye! Look at what you’ve done to me!”
A single, lurching sob
escaped Jose’s lips as he stared into the remains of the face below, the
creature pulling itself ever closer.
“The mess you made of me.”
The meat of his lips twitched, the puppet imitation of a smile. He pushed
himself right before Jose’s face. “The corpse you made of Cooper...”
Jose closed his eyes,
pushing out all the air in his lungs. He was right. Whatever it was clinging
it’s rotting body to his, it was right. He could blame the war, the Japs or his
mother for ever being born, but the truth was simple enough. It was his bullet
that had passed through Cooper’s back. A shot fired in wild anger, finding the
wrong mark as it wedged itself deep in the nineteen-year old’s lungs. He
remembered trying to explain it, desperately telling the kid dying in front of
him that it was an accident and begging for forgiveness even as Cooper’s lungs
started to fill. He shouldn’t have been there. None of them should have been
here, inventing new and terrible ways to kill each other over bare rock in the
middle of a wide sea. Men were never supposed to come here Jose realised; this
place was for beasts and the corpses which fed them. Best left to animals like
Murphy. Left here to die so that the world never had to bear their evils. A sob
wracked his chest as he knew what he had to do.
“I’m sorry, Cooper.”
He lifted his foot.
Click.
***************************************************************************
“Hey, Pullman!”
The young man turned,
stubbing out another cigarette. Hadn’t stopped since he got back.
“Pullman!”
Rising from the foxhole,
Pullman slung the rifle over his shoulder, calling back.
“What?”
A kid, red in the face
from running, pulled up beside him, leaning on the sandbags as he caught his
breath.
“They found him alive!
Shot to shit, but they found him!”
Pullman rounded, grabbing
the kid by his shoulders as his grip became painfully tight.
“Where is he?”
The kid recoiled, pulling
hard to break free of Pullman’s grip.
“Jesus, cool it buddy. We
found him near the treeline. Stretcher should be near medical.”
Like that, he was gone,
running wildly towards the medical tent as the kid shrugged, lighting up a
cigarette of his own. Pullman bounded through the camp, dodging each defensive
emplacement as he made his way to the tent. A few meters out, he saw them. Two
stretcher bearers carrying Jose between them. His heart soared.
“Jose!”
He skidded to a stop
beside the stretcher as his smile fell. Jose’s legs were thickly wrapped with
bandage, spots of red blooming through the white cotton. But what stopped
Pullman dead were his eyes. Once so set and noble, they had retreated into his
skull, dark and sunken despite their unbreaking stare.
“Jose! What happened?”
The medic ushered him
aside, his colleague lifting the khaki flap. Jose’s eyes darted round, finding
Pullman as he tried to raise a shaking finger.
“Move, soldier. This man
needs treatment.”
Barley audible, Jose
spoke in a rasping whisper, eyes locked on Pullman.
“It’s real.”
Pullman leaned close to
listen, dodging the hands of the stretcher bearer as Jose was pulled inside.
“Hell is real, Pullman. Hell is real and Murphy
is waiting for me there.”
They ushered him in, the
tent flap falling closed as Pullman silently watched. Reaching into his pocket,
he pulled out a cigarette, lighting it as he stared out into the jungle beyond.
CASINO DRAWINGS, LUXURY, NV - Mapyro
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