Following Orders | Teen Ink

Following Orders

September 7, 2013
By asdfghjkleve BRONZE, Kerry, Other
asdfghjkleve BRONZE, Kerry, Other
1 article 0 photos 0 comments

Smoke. I smell smoke, and not smoke that was the result of a burnt blackberry pie; real smoke. Gunfire. A sound that has become familiar to my ears and my natural reflex is to duck. I rise again and shoot like there’s no tomorrow. That ain’t no joke for a soldier. If you want me to tell you what I see, well, I don’t see much. Just a whole lot’a blood and mud. And dead Southern soldiers, of course. I’m a’tellin’ you, them from the North can sure shoot a bullet.
“Yo, Lil’ Jim!” I look to my left and see my brother, Jim, looking right at my face. “You ‘right there?”
“You bet I am!” I call back. I try to make myself sound real confident, so he don’t get distracted and shot in the head. I don’t know what I’d do if Jim got shot in the head!
He nods, “You keep it up, Lil’ Jim!”
If you is a’wonderin’ why we’re both called Jim, it’s ‘cause I ain’t really called Jim, my name is Charles. You see, when I was just a lil’ half-pint, I used to walk ‘round behind Jim and do what he was a’doing, and everyone started to call me Lil’ Jim. It stuck. Heck, I nearly even said it was my name signin’ up for this here war.
Now, just cause I’m a’fightin’ for the South don’t mean that I agree with ‘em. Heck, even Mama don’t agree but she sent us anyway. Probably ‘cause Gran-pop wanted us to. You see, Jim and I’s Gran-pop is a rich, real rich. He’s had the same slaves – I mean ‘helpers’ as he prefers to call ‘em – for thirty-three years! Now, that’s a mighty fine number! Since Pa died, Mama’s just been a’listenin’ to to anything Gran-pop’s been a’sayin’! That’s why I’m here at only sixteen; Gran-pop thought it’d be his last chance to see me in the uniform he wore so proudly.
The sound of a grenade interrupts my thoughts. It lands just a few feet away from me. Near Jim. But Jim can’t be dead; he’d have warned me or somethin’. Then I realise: in war, there ain’t no warning. I get down on my knees and crawl in the mud to where Jim was. There in a pool o’ blood is my brother, sleepin’.
“Jim, you gotta wake up now,” I say, but he don’t. “Jim!” I’m a’cryin’ now. My brother ain’t dead! He just ain’t! For the next few minutes, I forget that I’m a soldier in this damn war, for this damn reason and I kneel above my brother. My brother.
Suddenly, there is a sharp pain in ma back, and I fall on top of Jim. I was shot. Most soldiers die proud ‘cause they were a’fightin’ for what they believe in or their country or something. But Jim ‘n’ I, we had to die, after killing others, just ‘cause we were followin’ orders.


The author's comments:
to be read in a southern accent.

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