Haus was already used to it now. The artillery fire, the rats, the cold dry meals. It was the normal day of a private in the German Army in 1917. Haus had already felt like a battle hardened warrior, even though he only saw combat once. And even then, he was on the defending side of the trench, firing at the Tommies. But everyone in his company agreed, the war was fought against not only the Entente, but against disease, rats, and the filth.
Haus was a young skinny man of 20 years. Before the war, he was average sized, and well fed. In the trenches, he had lost a lot of weight, and if he was sent back home today, his family would think he had been in a prison. He had hazel eyes, and short blonde hair, short enough to be covered by a helmet. He enlisted in the Army at 19 in 1916, when the war was starting to dull down. Back home, news of great German victories persuaded him and many young kids to enlist.
And when he did, he was sent to Belgium. He had fought at 2nd Ypres, seen the horrors of war never romanticized in Germany, and looked at Death holding a rifle, charging at him. He had felt as if Death's shadow had come over their trench, and they were forced to escape, however, he had been later told it was this new poisonous gas. Haus could only imagine what went through the minds of the Gas's inventor.
So here Haus was, Ypres, Belgium, in an elaborate trench system a few miles away from another elaborate trench system under a Union Jack. His unit had been stationed at Messines Ridge, he arrived about the 6th of June, after reports of a build up of enemy activity. Haus didn't know what they were thinking, attack a ridge of pillboxes. The fools.
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