From the blunted summit of a hillock, the camouflaged enemy bunker was hawk- eyeing the village near Monte- Casino. The village had a bigger road, few big lanes and many small getaways. The allied troopers entered the village and fanned out. The allegiance forged by force had Indian contingent as well. From atop we must have looked like mice entering the maze in search of a cheese cube; or like the minuscule rodents trapped in the back alley. With pussy feet we advanced. With backs walled up we peeped through the corners of the remnant buildings. Our vigil ricocheted from roof tops to windows, from closed doors to empty pavements in search of enemy signs. Eroded benches, stained window panes, broken street lamps and abandoned lanes is all what we could see.
I was following Him, we all were. We climbed a mound of
rubble and ruins. This gave us a better leverage and better view. Taking cover behind
the big boulder we hunkered down. We were squatting on the wreckage pile of
someone’s house, on the debris of someone’s dreams.
While carefully peeking through His binoculars He said “It
is funny, how the definition of treasure changes during the war. For empty
water bottles it is the undried well and chlorine tablets, for growling
stomachs it is the half rotten fruits and vegetables or the tinned tunas…..and
for our depleting arsenal, it is magazines for our Thompsons.” A wry smile
followed.
We on the other hand just sat still, trying to calm our
exploding hearts in the chest wall. After all we were in Italy assaulting
against the winter line held by Axis. We all knew that the Germany and its
friends were not exactly of compassionate kind. They outnumbered us
strategically, numerically and technologically. We all knew that we were
waiting for our turn to die; our eyes were wide open just to see from where it
was coming. From the corner of my eye, I could see a bulleted polka dot wall,
it was the only wall standing. Even the ceiling was blown off. It could have
been a class room once, or may be something else who knows. There in the heap
of rocks, concrete and bricks, I could see a black trunk, half buried filled
with ammunition. I brought it to His notice.
Happy but not convinced with the find He pierced through the
binoculars for 15 minutes.
“Why the enemy has the ammunition matching exactly to our
weaponry?” He thought.
But before He could think aloud a young British officer
darted towards the find. What seemed like any other residual junk left behind
by bombings; was actually a booby trap. One wrong step and the British
ammunition boot was tugging on the trip wire. The bombs exploded with deafening
decibels. Those in the close range were in shambles. Others were drenched in
blood and then it started raining.
It was not cloudy but it started drizzling. The sun was
vomiting heat yet it started raining. The rain drops were acidic. The
screeching shells started shattering all around. The ground below vibrated and
the dust whirled up. As the causalities increased the screaming and yelling
increased. All opened fired in the direction of the source of bombarding, the
hill. The bunker was out of reach yet everyone kept on firing in frenzy. He was
the only one who calmly cowered down and waited.
“Just stay put. Don’t shoot you morons! They are out of
range. Save your ammo. We will require it when they send a squad to swipe and shoot
us, once the shelling stops.” He kept on shouting.
The explosions were un- ceasing. He was saying something to
me, but all I could do was to try and lip read. All I could see was dry, cut,
dusty lips moving incomprehensibly. The blasts had torn my ear drum rendering
me useless to hear. The smut and soot pierced the eyes; blind- folding us if
not blinding. We were changing positions to dodge the in-comings. A heavy slab
flew from the blast near by and hit my right knee. The pain was so excruciating
that I collapsed. I blacked out. I thought It was my time up.
Then my eyes opened only intermittently to witness the
misery around. The first time my eyes opened at that time I realized that He
was carrying me on his shoulder, running helter- skelter in search of a
shelter. The second time around I was propped up against the wall with a pistol
in my hand. He was at a distance aiming and shooting at the enemy. Next time
around the shelling had almost stopped. My knee was crushed and drenched red. His
body was sprinkled with jagged pieces of shrapnel but still He was fixing the
bayonet to his gun for close combat.
Looking at me He said with deep in-drawing voice “Remember, a
bullet in the back is more painful literally and metaphorically than on the
chest. You too have a gun and bullets with name.” He started aiming at the
enemy in the prone rifle position. He never moved after that.
The callosity of the human nature is unskinned during war.
We all were strangers to one another. It was strangers for whom we fought and
it was strangers with whom we fought. We were blood brothers destined to either
kill or get killed. One final time I saw up above towards the heaven. There
were angels over our shoulders. The British Hawker Hurricane was roaring and
tearing the air. In no time the bunker was fumed. I realized that, on that day,
no bullet, no knife had my name.
∞∞∞∞∞∞∞∞∞∞∞∞∞∞∞∞∞∞∞∞∞∞∞∞∞∞∞∞∞∞∞∞∞∞∞∞∞∞∞∞∞∞∞
The tape recorder went blank. The silence was punctuated by the
squeaking of the ceiling fan which had one of its blades, bent a little. The
little air that it moved, fluttered the pages of 1969 hung on the wall. In the
olive-green room near the window sat a tall thin dark man who had side
partitioned, oiled hair and a paralytic limp on the right. He was wearing grey
trousers, untucked off- white shirt and golden framed glasses. Near the
opposite wall sat an army uniform with a maroon beret worn with a rakish angel.
Adjacent to him stood a solider, with hands ramrod straight by his sides. The
room was filled with few more people sitting on netted, wooden chairs near the
main door.
“I despise the greed and rapacity filled in this room. It is sad
when people lie for glamour that too on the doings of war veterans
posthumously. In spite of army pension and other perks, it is dispiriting to
see the youth claiming more on the basis of a blatant lie.” Said the counselor tucking his white hair under the beret.
There was a ripple of disapproval from those seated on netted,
wooden chairs which was shunned by the solider standing next to the counselor.
“For 25th anniversary of Indian Army’s
contribution in World War 2; we were compiling the war stories of that era. The
idea was to identify and honor their supreme sacrifice and bestow upon them
the medals they well deserved. We got
many letters. We came across 3 specific letters and this tape. The descriptions
bore remarkable similarities. They each claim that their story is true. Now there
can’t be four heroes in the same story, right?” The counselor chuckled in
sarcasm looking at the man in off- white shirt.
“Which means three, out of four are lying.” Piercing through
the crowd he continued.
“This meeting is to clear the misunderstanding. They all
gave your reference and hence, regretfully I had to invite you to this circus
to testify.” Said the counselor looking at the golden glasses with a guilt
face.
“This is not a meeting. This is a mock trial to make a
scapegoat out of us, so as to hide the short comings of the defenses in
identifying their own heroes well in time.” Said someone from the crowd. A
rumble rose in the crowd and faded away.
The counselor asked to the man near the window “Are you the first
person in the narrative?”
Yes, said the man with golden glasses.
“And who is the ‘He’ you are referring to in your story?”
asked the counselor with a subtle sharpness in his voice; looking at the crowd
After a pin drop silence he continued, “Is he sepoy Laxman
Singh or Sonam Sharma from infantry? Is he Harpal Kartara from Sikhs or sepoy
Gobind Yechury?” His eyes pierced through the families of these veterans.
The families listened the silence. Today their strong belief
was at the brink of an earthquake. They were seeing for the first time the man
who could have written those letters or could have sent the tape. More so this
was the man who could have seen their family heroes in flesh and blood when the
heart was still pumping. Each had a quizzing thought, was there anything more
to share. A hope lingered that others were lying.
“The soldiers are the war wicks. The wick of the cannon ball
anyway burns. The cannon ball doesn’t know the direction of the friends or the
foes.” Said the man adjusting his golden glasses.
“The Britannica lured the hungry Indians to volunteer, which
they had starved in the first place. Remember how the British Raj looted our
grains and assets to feed their war horses?” he momentarily looked at the counselor. The counselor looked away not able to withstand the directness of
the stare.
“Humpty- Dumpty sat for a war; Humpty- Dumpty had a great
war.”
“Jack & John went up the hill to fetch the pail of
power. Both fell down and broke their brow but crown prevailed last laughter.”
“Churchill used the
colonial people as pawns; first in line to die last in line for cereals.
Different war codes for different colored derma. Bunkers for whites, pigsty
for others. Whites fought on full stomachs; others fought on left- overs. They had
plenty of bullets to rive, blacks and brown had few with couple of bullets in
the pocket for self; in case the capture was inevitable.” He continued
passionately.
“Indians expected a heart- felt thanks from Chruchill which
they never got. Many lost their lives on the foreign soil, fighting for the
sworn flag; fighting for Britannia. Many lived with everything lost. We don’t
even know if they were buried or burnt; or just left for the vultures.” He
paused.
The humid eyes stared at him.
“You ask me who is the hero of this story. Well…. everyone
is. You ask me who is lying. Well…. No one is lying.” Said he curtly looking at
the counselor.
All were confused, relieved, bewildered, stuck by tornado.
The kaleidoscopic emotions were difficult to contain in the eyes and the
feelings started rolling down the cheeks. The Counselor's face became white
like an A4 size paper, as nothing was unearthed yet.
“There is only one liar in this room and that would be me.” On
this statement everyone exchanged befuddled looks.
“I am not a war veteran. I am not even a soldier. I am just
a simple person who felt that the mourning families of the soldiers need little
more than just the pensions and perks. They needed a story to live on. They
needed a story to remember, a chronicle to cherish, a tale to be inspired. I just
gave them that.” He got up and hobbled towards the door.
“A coward can kill but only brave can face the death with
dignity. Remember, willing to die needs guts. A soldier is a hero irrespective
of his kills. Decaf death or Latte demise; the soldiers face it like sipping a
hot coffee.” Saying this he exited.
The air which was riddled with tension eased out. The hall gradually became vacant with intact prides.
On the other hand he still awaits the courtroom trial; the minutes of this meeting
however are long lost.