by Mark Readman
weak tea
Albert Lickiss
walks by the mill on his way to the school the stone work is cold to his finger
tips,. his boots echo on the cobbles beneath the arch that’s carrying the
railway, there is a silence in the autumn air, its cold and misty in the north.
Albert is up early
so he can count the panes of glass in the windows at school, it’s something he
wants to remember forever, Miss Hughes had made him see how important
mathematics would be, a glint from the ground catches his eye, a shilling that
somebody has lost.
Albert is honest
and would give it back to the owner but there’s no one around, placing the coin
in his pocket he returns to the mill. This is his first day, fourteen years of
age, the mill has a place for him, his mother and father had seen to
that.
Albert is a big
lad, looking older than his age and a quick
learner.
The work is heavy,
bales of cotton are sorted on the top floor the heat and the noise coming from
the looms below is unbearable at times, he likes to feel the coin in his
pocket.
The locomotive
makes a sound like thunder as it passes over the arch, with its cargo of cloth
from the mill, on its way to the tailors to make uniforms, that’s what dad had
said, and Albert’s mother did not want that sort of talk in the house.
Albert now sixteen
years plus, the war that dad had spoke of had started some time ago, the
military men were going from town to town recruiting. Albert had read the
posters, The Country Needs You, God save the King, in his pocket his fingers
feel the kings’ head on his lucky coin.
No one had claimed
to have lost it and he never claimed to have found such an item, working in the
mill he learnt many new skills and it had been said he could be a foreman one
day. Albert has thoughts about this, how many years would he have to work before
that happens.
It was on a
Saturday in the town square; he watched as the men lined up and moved along to
the table where an officer shouted out name. He was trying to keep out of the
way but somehow Albert found himself in front of the officer, “Name!” “Albert”
Christian name “Albert.” Sign here the officer looked curiously at him. Along
with the others being directed to the waiting trucks, Albert had no chance of
saying good bye.
Before long he is
on his way to France, on the ship he feels the uniform, could the cloth have
come from his mill, he holds the silver coin thinking of
home.
He’s not had time
to write, his parents have no idea to his whereabouts’ they can only guess.
Mother has written a letter telling of how much she misses her only son, he will
never receive the letter as it is addressed to Albert Lickiss; the army have no
record of this name.
The trenches are
deep, filled with watery mud, for Albert it is a lonely place the older soldiers
talk quietly amongst themselves, these battle hardened men the wounded moan and
groan as they lay dying on the ground above, he counts them down as the area
becomes quieter.
A soldier climbs
the ladder a single shot is heard then a thud no one moves, there’s talk of
going over the top and charging with bayonets fixed.
The night has been
very quiet, the big guns are silent; some rifle shots pick off those who dare to
look out onto the no man’s land. In the darkness just before dawn they are to
climb the ladders and lay low, hundreds of men following orders getting ready
for the element of surprise.
The order is given
they all rush ahead, entangled in barbed wire some never stood a chance, the
falling shells explode around them, machine gun fire mows them down fifty at a
time, a bullet passes through Albert’s chest.
As his life passes
before him, his hand grasps his silver shilling taking one last look, as he
counts panes of glass, he falls into a mire of mud and guts. His young body
slips down into a crater; another shell explodes, throwing tons of mud over him
and his silver coin.
The decades have
gone and many people have seen the plaque, inside the museum that used to be the
mill, remembering those who did not return, from the Great War all the names are
there to be read.
Except for the
only son of Mr and Mrs
Lickiss?
Their family name like many others forever
gone.
But a mystery remains who was A. Albert, the
first name on the plaque, recorded as missing in action. He and his coin remain
unfound till this very day.
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