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Bretton Wood by Ivan Donn Carswell
It happened by Bretton Wood (although that wasn’t it’s real name) and I recall a clear, grey dawn and the tall sky fallow with torpid clouds; we went on before to watch how they sundered out of wretched sleep and patrolled into the gathering, garrulous sun. In the frail light we sensed but did not see flickering images of unwarlike forms, soft-edged shapes slithering between trees without panic, figures without definition fleeing on precisely placed hooves the misshapen soldiers who merged silently with the soft clay dawn. At the tree-line we knew them and were in awe of their focused but trouble-free leaving, aware they moved in a way which we could not have noticed but for our own anxious delusion. Then as we turned to watch our troops materialize like insubstantial wraiths from the confusion of trees the two rifle shots which shredded this surreality rang out; whip-sharp cracks shouted out a second apart, followed by resolute thumps echoed and distant-sure but still true in the pure, clean air. Oh, we knew what it was, we’d been fired at before, were veterans of peace and lovers of war who knew and were angered at a disingenuous breach of our ordered reality. He’s shooting the deer, my sergeant said, shaking his long-suffering head incredulously, shaking his head and seeing the pointlessly dead soldiers swarming in my mind; God forbid, a lousy shot, but I’ll give him thanks – he’s made them disperse better than we could have done with a couple of blanks. Whomever he was he saw who he’d fired at, knew his foul error and fired no more. As I cursed our cadets through their unruly drills and my sergeants searched for the shooter in tussock-clad hollows and rock-crested hills the Colonel despaired, Why do you still swear? I was hard-pressed to answer, and mutely declared it was to do with the deer. I should have expected it I finally said, I knew they were there. It didn’t explain and I guessed he required my clamouring mouth stilled; there was no hope of that now - I barely survived the moment at dawn where my virtue was killed. © I.D. Carswell
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