At the wall of
slate.
Neither Kurt nor Helmut
can make it that day. So Hermann and I go up to the “Schlierwand”,
the wall of slate. We have most successfully fished up there before,
and now we have “pine apples”, American hand grenades and we can
fish again.
The wall of slate rises
about 5 to 7 meters above the water level and we take a position at
the lowest point. Hermann brought only one of the famed pine apples.
For the first time I see an American hand grenade. It is impressive
in its neatness. About the size of a good sized potato, it fits
comfortably into your hand, and can be hurled much like a rock.
Hermann hands it to me. It’s surprisingly heavy. On one side of the
ribbed exterior an L-shaped clasp is held by a ring through a cotter
pin. I hold the grenade in my left hand and I pull the ring . Now I
can lift the clasp. A black button which was held down by the clasp
springs up and I seem to hear a hissing sound. I am so petrified, I
drop the grenade in front of us. At the same moment Hermann kicks it
with his shoe.
As if in slow motion the
grenade spins side ways, rolls toward the wall and disappears over
the lip. Hermann and I hit the ground and cover our heads.
The grenade is now in
free fall, out of our sight. It does not hit the water. It blows half
way down. I remember thinking that it’s not as loud as the German
potato masher.
Still lying on the ground,
we look at each other and we become instantly aware that we were
mighty close to a belly full of shrapnel and likely death. I begin to
shake all over my body. I cannot talk.
Hermann sits up and
reaches over to help me into a sitting position. I can feel that he
too is shaking.
We sit for a while, just
looking at each other.
Then Hermann begins to
laugh. I chime in and like two idiots we sit there and laugh. Finally
I say: “That was no nine seconds.” I refer to the delay of the
German hand grenade. Hermann is still laughing.. Finally we get up
and walk home. We don’t talk too much on the way.
Days later, in a casual
conversation with one of our American friends, we find out that
pine-apples have a three and a half second delay. You hold it in your
throwing hand with the ring protruding through your fingers. You pull
the ring and, still holding the clasp in place, you throw the damned
thing.
The clasp falls off as the
grenade leaves your hand, and three seconds later it explodes.
Now you tell me.
*******************
The Wall of Slate.
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