The lost weapon.
We heard
explosions far away.
It was a dark
and gloomy November morning. We had been up before sunrise and were served a
reinforced breakfast, intended to last us all day without any more food until
after sunset.
My entire
platoon, all 40 of us, was riding on the open truck bed of a camouflage-painted
Diesel truck. The driver was skillful, but we still got stuck in the mud, far
from the nearest road, a couple of times. Then we had to get off, to lighten
the load, and help push the truck forward to where the rear wheels could grip
again.
It was scary. We
heard more explosions in the distance.
We were a bunch
of scrawny 16 – 17-year-olds. Most of us had come straight from the
school-bench with a few exceptions, farmer’s sons. They had more muscles than
most of us.
None on this
truck bed had ever done anything like this before. Some had joined the
voluntary militia at age 14, and received some training on how to shoot, and been
on the odd overnight tenting-excursion, but only on warm summer nights. Nothing
like this.
We were
traveling on a special mission with live ammunition.
This morning, we
had awoken in circular tents, 20 in each, with our feet touching and the head
at the perimeter. The single tent pole, serving double duty as stove, had only
heated our feet. They were cozy, the rest of the body was cold.
This was all
different. We heard a machine gun rattling in the distance.
The Diesel
engine, in front, roared at times, as the rear wheels were spinning. The
progress was sporadic but we were, inexorably, moving towards where the
explosions were, and now, machine gun fire was heard.
Our dark green
military greatcoats were tightly wrapped around us all, as we sat on the
flatbed of the truck. What a sight we must have been? A truck loaded with a
bunch of green bags with only a helmet and two eyes to identify us as human
beings.
I looked sideways
at my best friend, Sven. He was a year older than I, as cold as all, and just
as uncomfortable.
Our weapons were
either tied to our harness, or held tightly, not to fall away or be damaged
during any of the wild gyrations of our unstable mode of transportation.
The uniform
harness front pockets were bulging with an extra supply of ammunition. This was
going to be a day of serious action.
It was still
semi dark. The truck following us had no lights on. Don’t waste energy on
lights, the fuel is for getting us there, not to power unnecessary electrical
loads. This truck, similar to ours, carried our fording boats and boxes and
boxes of explosives. It had gotten stuck too, once, but was much harder to push
out of the muck. It couldn’t be off-loaded and lightened.
We were getting
closer to the sporadic firing and odd explosion.
The trucks were,
eventually, parked in between some dark and wet fir-trees.
Time to unload.
Ooh, that hurt,
standing up again after so much pummeling on the bumpy truck. My creaky bones
sprung to action.
The second truck
carried our most ingeniously designed fording boats. Each was made up from two
identical half-boat pieces, attached to make a double ended boat.
They were heavy
and hard to put together. It may have been simple in training, but we were
cold, the moisture made everything slippery, and not every boat got the centre
mounted rubber seal in the right place. They would leak, we knew, but probably
not leak enough to cause any of the boats to sink during our short 50-metre
river crossing.
There were some
more explosions from across the river.
The boats were
not very stable but would carry ten men at a time.
Sven and I were
in the same boat. The centre seal leaked profusely. All ten of us paddled like
crazy to get across before we sank. We didn’t quite make it. The water-laden boat
drew too much draft and we had to jump into the near-freezing knee-deep water
and walk ashore. Once there we could tip the boat, empty out the water and pull
it ashore. Or, that was the idea.
During all of
this, priority number one was, keep your weapon dry.
Poor Sven, he
tripped and got wet all the way over the beltline of his uniform. That
meant that he had to be super-cold for the rest of the day. Someone threw a
greatcoat on the ground, and we put Sven down, and rolled him inside, to at
least suck as much water out of his heavy winter-type woolen uniform as we could.
He looked better
when he stood up again.
Our mission,
once we had forded, was to attack up the hillside by the river, through a thicket
of trees, then cross a front yard to a farmhouse. Once there, enter it and
proceed to seek shelter in the basement, without using any stairs.
“Be aware that
the house may be booby-trapped.”
We could still
hear the odd explosion in the forest, and some single shots too.
All of us were
by now cold and had waterlogged boots. Our weapons were tied to our harnesses
in a hither dither way, as we carried the boxes with explosives and in separate
boxes, the fuses.
The progress was
slow. We made it all the way through the dense forest to the little meadow in
front of the farmhouse. Nobody had shot at us, so far.
We were crawling,
heads down, over the wet ground. There were several enemies visible in the
windows. Our sergeant in charge signaled us to be silent.
Don’t make a
sound.
Then, on
command, we opened up with our 9 mm Karl Gustav model 45 submachine guns at the
persons in the windows. None shot back. They all fell down and disappeared from
view.
I had emptied
the entire 36 bullet magazine of my gun and swiftly replaced it with a full
one. The barrel was too hot to touch. Everyone around me put full magazines in
too. The guns were put on the safety catch. We were all well trained on that
score. Don’t shoot your friend by mistake.
We carefully
approached the house, crawling across the yard.
One must always
suspect that the doors and windows are booby-trapped. We used our best
demolition skills and blasted our way in. First, we blew a hole in the outer
wall and crept in. Our enemies were all lying still on the floor. None moved. Then,
systematically, we blew our way into all the other rooms in the house, including
the kitchen cold storage. Once in, we were met with chaos, as the preserves in
glass containers had shattered, spreading preserved cabbage and mustard
everywhere. Johnny, one of the boys in my platoon, cut his hand on a piece of
glass. He was the first casualty for the day. A medic was summoned.
They met outside
and the blood flow was stilled under an impressive-looking bandage.
Our ears were
aching from the explosions, all observed from a safe distance, of course.
Next, how to get
down to the basement?
Someone made the
wrong choice in the setting. Just about the entire inside of the house
collapsed when an excessive amount of floor-mounted explosives were set off. We
cleared the room from debris, rigged a rope, and the first soldier was hoisted
down.
The sun was
invisible above the grey skies, but we could feel that we were nearing the end
of the day.
End of mission.
Our day of live
ammunition exercise had ended.
Only one recruit
had been injured, Johnny. He had a cut in his hand.
The forest got
eerily quiet all around us. The other platoons, which had practiced explosion-management
and machine gun firing at the nearby firing range, were done too.
We all lined up
in the yard in front of the, by now, very sad-looking long-abandoned farmhouse.
“You did well,
my boys”, said Lieutenant Hermansson.
He was, as
usual, in his perfectly pressed uniform. The two lieutenant’s stars on each of his
shoulder lapels were, as always, newly polished and the only light spots on
this cold, gloomy, and humid day.
His 1954 model
year, always newly washed Ford Prefect officer’s car, painted in camouflage
green, was parked in the driveway some 100 metres away.
Our two trucks had
been moved to the same driveway.
Time to wrap up.
That was hard
work. Our young bodies suffered from a full day in wet boots, without food, and
for Sven, in wet uniform pants.
First, we had to
carefully collect the cardboard ‘enemy’ figures that had stood in the windows
and doorways. They were full of holes that we put tape over. The spring-charged
fall-down-trigger mechanism was reset, and all had to be put in protective
bags, ready for the next live ammunition exercise.
No explosives
could be returned to storage, once taken out. The unused explosives were put in
one impressive-looking pile some distance away. Only one detonator was used to
set it off. It was connected with about 150 m of explosive fuse that ran at 7
600 m/sec. It was, in reality, a narrow bead of explosive too.
We had to lie
down, far away, to watch. The explosion was impressive, and made one huge hole,
at least three metres in diameter and a metre deep. Some pine needles blew off
the nearby trees. Otherwise, all looked the same. Sound, alone, leaves no
lasting impression.
The boats had to
be separated into their original two pieces, stacked, and put back on the truck
bed. It was harder to lift the boats up on the truck than to slide them down
earlier.
This is when
Sven lost his weapon, his bayonet.
Finally,
Lieutenant Hermansson bade goodbye,
“See you at the
regiment,”
… and fired up
his officer’s car. His uniform was dry and clean. The cloth seats didn’t get sullied.
The truck ride
back to the regiment was not as bumpy. We rode on regular roads all the way.
As soon as the
trucks, carrying the four platoons in our company, were back it was inspection
time. We, hungry, wet, cold, and truly miserable by now, had to stand in
perfect regimental order for an inspection. Johnny, with a large bandage on his
hand, stood there too.
He was singled
out and told:
“You did well
but stay away from broken glass in the future.”
The medic, with
his wetted first-aid bundle, was complimented as well.
“You stayed near
the fighting boys. That is where a medic should be.”
Then, a
catastrophic event:
Sven had tried
to cover his empty bayonet holder with his jacket, but the officer still
noticed that something was missing.
“Where is your
weapon, Soldier 925 Rosenqvist?”
He had lost his
bayonet, the one for our 6.5 mm Mauser model 1896 rifle.
It was dark by
now. This is terrible. After dismissal, some in our platoon gathered around and
asked:
“When did you
see it last, Sven?”
“When we loaded
the boats.”
We changed
clothes and went to dinner. It was late. The kitchen supervisor, a gruff lady,
was not pleased.
“Why can’t you
boys ever finish your exercises on time? You were supposed to be here at 18:00.
Do you realize that I now have to pay overtime for the kitchen staff?”
It had been a
good day with plenty of interesting stories to share.
Sven was deeply
troubled. To lose a weapon would mean that he not only had to pay for it, but
also risked time in the slammer, the regimental jail.
My Italian-made
Parilla scooter may not have had the best light in the world, but it worked.
“Sven, let’s go
back and see if we can find it.”
We had to return
by 22:00, or our troubles would be unfathomable.
I drove fast. It
was only a few kilometres to the riverside. Once there, I puttered my scooter
around, on idle, and shone the light everywhere. Then I left it, still running
with the light on, as Sven and I scoured the ground with our military issue
map-reading lights until the batteries gave out.
No bayonet.
We barely made
it back a minute before 22:00, as the guard on duty prepared to close the
barrier to the only entrance to the regimental grounds.
That was a close
call.
No bayonet,
though.
Military justice
is swift and immutable.
One week later,
the military court assembled. The entire regiment was seated in the gym. It had
seats put up for the 1 000 young soldiers there that year of 1957.
Sven Rosenqvist
was called to the stand.
“Did you lose a
weapon?”
“Yes sir.”
“That will be punished
by seven nights in the regimental jail. On workdays, you report to jail at
18:00 and will be released at 06:00 the next morning. Saturday and Sunday will
be served in the jail.
The value of the
weapon will be deducted from your pay.” (Four weeks worth.)
Sven went to
jail at 18:00. As it happened, our company was on guard duty that Saturday.
Sven was liked by many. We gave him cigarettes to smoke in his cell. No other
favours could be offered.
The commanding
officer came for inspection once. Someone saw him crossing the exercise grounds.
No smoking
allowed.
The off-duty
crowd opened all doors and windows to vent the tobacco smoke. It was a minus 20
Celsius day, and the whole guard house was freezing cold by the time the
officer entered.
“It’s cold in
here.”
“We are
practicing for being outside, sir.”
“Carry on.”
A few weeks
later, Sven was called to the commanding officer.
“Your bayonet
has been found. It was wedged into the locking mechanism in one of the fording
boats. It has been identified as yours by the serial number.
You will receive
a credit for what was deducted from your pay.”
Sure enough, on
the next payday, Sven received five times the normal amount.
We, all ten of
us in our group, went to a bar, one that isn’t all that particular about age,
etc. We all got drunk, or at least very happy. Still, all walked straight
enough to make it through the guard house before 22:00 that night.
Sven, eventually,
gave up smoking, became an officer in the Swedish army, and retired as a Colonel
about 35 years later.
I left the army,
a lot wiser, after my mandatory two years. I have never touched a gun or
anything explosive since. I retired after a 40-year career as a mechanical
engineer.
Sven and I, both
over 80 now, are still friends.
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