HOW
CAN YOU TALK TO ME OF ONE MAN’S DEATH,
WHEN
UNTOLD MILLIONS DIED?”
“BECAUSE,”
he said,
“THE
MADNESS WHICH ALLOWED
THIS
ONE TO DIE WAS PRESENT IN THE DEATH OF ALL.”
**************************
There it was:
Three o’clock in the afternoon and, as he looked over
the edge of the red tin roof, he could see the river, almost blue,
foaming past the old city walls and carrying with it the high
pitched, hissing sound of the fast flowing water.
Now, that the last shots of the anti-aircraft guns had
ceased, the stillness that fell over the town was unreal. He turned
on his back and, looking into the sky, he saw the small light-grey
puffs, which looked so much like clouds, but which were all that was
left of an exploding shell after all the steel had gone.
He closed his eyes for a moment, but the puffs, round
and dark, then wind-torn and light, still hung on the inside of his
eye lids and could not be wished away. He lay there for a long time
and allowed the sun, the brilliant sun, the undisturbed sun, the
neutral sun, the sun to make his face feel hot and the skin tight
over his nose and cheeks.
The “All Clear” signal of the wailing siren, that
long, constantly rising wail, which never seemed to end, and which
seemed to carry him and the roof and the city and the river up and
up, which seemed to turn and spin everything on an upward spiral
toward the sun. Yes, the sun and the river and this town and this
girl beside him and this stupid war…….this girl.
He raised himself on one elbow and the tin roof on which
they lay gave a hollow bang. He looked at her. She had been watching
him and she smiled. A long blond strand of hair, slightly curled at
the end, came over her cheek and to the corner of her smile. He wished that she would brush her hair back, out of her face and stop
the tickle which he felt in the corner of his mouth.
“Where should we say we were?” he asked.
“Oh, any shelter. The school shelter; the shelter
underneath the library….anyway, no-one will ask.”
“At first they used to ask,” she said, ‘but now,
they got so used to it, they never bother.”
He shrugged his
shoulders:
“I guess we’d better go now.”
He stood up and the flat tin roof gave off another loud
and hollow sounding boom. She reached up and so their hands touched
casually and when he had pulled her to her feet, they stood and found
each other in a smile in spite of it. They tip-toed to the edge and
with every careful step the roof protested with a hollow boom. The
girl went first and he bent down to guide her firmly. As she lowered
herself, feet first, and gently down, her right hand gripped the wire
of the lightening rod and he held firmly to her left, down past the
eaves trough, her breasts pronounced by the pressure of her body
against the roof, now both hands on the rim, her blond hair
disappeared and then the gentle thump on the grass below. Erich
followed quickly.
“I’d better hurry,” she said and waved to him and
turned and went away.
He looked upward and saw the last puff in the sky had
gone and brilliant sunshine everywhere and then he noticed with
surprise that the town had re-awakened and re-appeared from
underground.
“That’s the last time I’ll try station IX,” he
muttered to himself. “Every move you make, that roof is noisier
than the Flack, The best is Station XII…..it’s in the sun as well
and the roof is solid stone and even grass and moss grows in the
cracks.”
The fact, that Station XII had Jesus on the cross with
big spike nail and bloody feet and chest and hands and all, caused
them at first to find a different spot to meet. Although they’d
never said as much, they’d both been happy to abandon Station XII
and secretly they felt relieved.
*************************
Bertstravels
(excerpt from a book I wrote so many years ago.)
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