Выбрать главу

He ran into the path of Parker and Jones’ foxhole and almost got shot by friendly fire.

“Hey, watch it, rook. That’s a sure way to get your head shot off,” Parker called.

Grillo waved, but didn’t stop to offer an excuse.

A German machine gun opened up and pelted the area with lead.

Sergeant Pierce grabbed Grillo as soon as he got close, and tugged him to the ground. Together they rolled into the Sarge’s foxhole.

“What the hell are you doing up, Private?” Sarge bellowed.

Pierce was a big guy and had a deep voice to match. He often shouted at the men of Baker Company, and offered to kick the ass of anyone tried to go against an order. But he was also a softy, and the other men spoke about him with some affection.

He was from Missouri, and had a pair of baby girls back home. He said he’d do anything for them, including going overseas to fight a damn war. Said they were the apple of his eye and he missed them every day.

Grillo had tried to picture the big man sitting on the floor playing with his kids instead of crouching behind a tree and shooting Germans with his Thompson, but the image didn’t resolve in his head.

“Me and Fahey are almost out of ammo. Got any more, Sarge?”

“Happens I do. How come you guys are out already? Assault’s just started.”

A pair of mortar rounds landed in the distance. Grillo ducked his head and pressed his helmet onto his head. Sarge scanned the area of impact and grunted.

“We’re all short, Sarge, on account of getting called out here. We were supposed to get resupplied in Bastogne.”

“Just giving you a ration of shit,” Pierce said with a half grin. “We’re all low on ammo and we can’t do much about it. Say, you notice the Krauts are shelling their own guys?”

“I noticed something else,” Grillo said.

“That Fahey is a chickenshit and makes you run around looking for more rounds?”

Grillo gulped back a chuckle.

“The Krauts are acting weird. They ain’t all firing on us, Sarge, and the ones that do shoot can’t hit a broad side of a barn.”

“Probably in worse shape than us, so the Führer sent his guys out to kill us with knives in the night. We’ll send them to hell in no time,” Pierce said.

“Okay, Sarge.”

“Foul-ups happen. Could be the Germans are in the wrong location, so they’re falling under their own fire. Good for us, bad for them.”

A mortar shell landed dangerously close and showered them both with debris. Grillo dropped to the ground and pressed his back against the foxhole.

“Bad for us too,” Grillo muttered to himself.

Another round landed farther away than the last one, but he didn’t let his guard up. Most of the guys he’d met ducked, prayed, and waited out the shelling.

Grillo had tried that the the first few times, but he’d been so scared he’d thought he’d have to melt snow in an ammo can to wash his one and only pair of skivvies. Most of the veterans were cool under pressure and went about the task of killing Germans like they were going to the dentist to get a tooth pulled. They didn’t want to do it, but duty called.

Grillo, on the other hand, had trouble finding his courage and resolve. He’d wept on the ground silently, the first time, curling up in a ball and whispering his mother’s name over and over until it stopped.

He was still scared to death, but it was getting easier to put on a brave face and pretend like he was one of the guys.

“Sir. About that ammo?”

“Right. Run about twenty feet northeast. Hunter’s got a backpack full of bullets. You grab a couple of boxes and hightail it back to Fahey. You boys stay low. Keep track of your rounds, because the company is low. Not just you two, but everyone. I don’t know when we’re going to get resupplied.”

“Got it, Sarge,” Grillo said. “Where’s Doc? I think I got hit.”

“The hell didn’t you say so? Where’s the wound?” Pierce said.

“Across my side. I haven’t looked at it yet,” Grillo panted. “Do you see blood, Sarge? I read that some guys get their blood pumping and don’t even know they been shot until they drop dead. I don’t want to drop dead.”

“Lemme see,” the Sergeant said.

Grillo worked at the buttons on his jacket for a few seconds, fingers cold and unforgiving. It felt like he was using cold sausage to manipulate his clothing. Sarge helped, then peeled the sides apart. He whistled.

Grillo looked down and found blood. That’s when the pain hit.

It was like razor blades across his rib cage. He gasped, then lifted his shirt farther, expecting to see worse. He couldn’t take in the entire wound, though, because his clothing blocked his view.

“Oh Christ, I got it good,” Grillo said.

Sarge leaned over, poking at Grillo’s ribcage, then sat back up.

“Lucky son of a bitch. It’s a scratch, but it’s a deep one. Probably shrapnel from one of those shells. Get Doc to put some sulfa on it. Know where he is?”

“I think so,” Grillo said.

“Ah, hell,” Sarge said. He lifted his head and yelled “Medic!”

“What kinda scratch, Sarge? Did it go through my skin? Is it deep?”

“It’s not that bad. Just pipe down while I get some help.”

“Christ, Sarge, what if it’s real bad?”

Sarge sat down and looked Grillo in the eye. “I play straight, okay? You’re a rookie out here and the guys razz you and that’s okay. You’ll get to do the same some day. I don’t play around when it comes to matters of you facing a life-threatening wound. Just calm down while we get you attended to. The city of Bastogne isn’t far. They got an aid station, so we’ll get you taken care of.”

“Okay, Sarge. Just scared, you know?”

“I know, kid. We’re all fucking scared. Keep your wits and keep shooting back when you can.”

Sarge bellowed for the medic again.

Grillo touched the wound, and recoiled as more pain raced up his side. Was it the kind of injury that would get him sent stateside? He couldn’t be wounded and sent home now. He’d just gotten here.

His father had fought in the Great War. He would be disappointed if his son came home wounded before he’d completed his tour. Christ, his father would probably be furious. The old man was taller than Grillo and broader of shoulder. He was old as dirt, but he could swing a fist when the mood struck. The mood had indeed struck, until Grillo was sixteen and almost as big as his father.

The old man had been a mean drunk, but when he was sober, he was mostly kind and loving. Grillo would give just about anything to go back to that time right now. He’d be a good kid and make his parents proud, instead of running off with his friends to sneak booze and cigarettes.

He’d tried to join the Army when hostilities were well underway in Europe, but he’d been too young to enlist. Now he felt too old to be in this cursed forest.

That was the problem with the war effort: it was so easy for kids to get their blood up and want to go off and fight the Japs or Krauts. The reality was that this was life on the front: hiding in foxholes and shooting at people who wanted to kill you. He was under no illusions that a bullet couldn’t find him at any time; hell, one had found him already, if the wound on his side was any indication.

Just a sound of a gunshot and then searing pain.

The next bullet might find his chest or skull.

Grillo hunkered down and waited for the doctor to arrive, and prayed he wouldn’t bleed out before then.