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keskiviikko 25. joulukuuta 2019

Chapter 1.2

Door was knocked so hard that Arthur thought cops were doing a raid.

- Arthur! Goddammit, open the door! 

- What the fuck, Mike?! Do ya know what time it is? 

- Have grown old? Mike said and laughed. - Take your stuff! Hurry! I have booked us flight to New York. 

-New York... What the fuck you are talkin', man? 

- I called them. They take us both. So start packing, you idiot. 

- I have to tell my boss... 

- You can email him from port. You have a new boss now. So, are you coming or not? 

- Yeah, of course... I email my sister. She can take care of my stuff here. Wait a sec. 

---

Arthur raised M16 and gave a double-tap. 

- Good! Now, Mozambique Drill! 

He turned at the same time with the target. Two to chest, one to head. 

- Next post! 

Arthur ran. He had been lazying after the army. In everyday life, he hadn't noticed. But here, doing stuff again, he felt extra pounds and extra years under his belt. The instructor was former British paratrooper, in his 40s but still made of steel. He hadn't taken his days off boozing around and eating cheap pizzas, like Arthur. 

At the end of the course, instructor, Jake, laughed. 

- Very well for a Yankee. Bit more morning jogs and you will do fine. 

- Thanks. Too much civilian stuff. Beers and shit. 

- I know. But don't worry. You should see what kind of horizontally challenged personnel we time by time get here. They sweat already when getting off the bench. 

Arthur enjoyed informal atmosphere. Something else compared to army. No saluting and standing in attention when drill sergeant crushes your toes. No pretty boys balling around like peacocks thinking they were end all, be all. They all were doing important things as they should, but all that cockniness he had hated was away. They were professionals, not babysitters. 

- Have you any idea where we are gonna deploy? Arthur asked from Jake. 

- Hah, I'm not dealing with that shit. I just use whip here, he said and plinked eye. - But I heard in the news that there are increasing international pressure to calm the pirates in Somalia. Too bloody many ship nappings and ransoms per year. 

- You reckon we're gonna go there? 

- I've my itch. There's a good business opportunity, and I think our bosses are pretty good at that stuff. Smelling the whale carcass. 

They laughed. 

- I haven't been in Somalia before, Arthur continued. - I met some guys who'd served with those who were there but... It was too long time ago. 

- Were you even born then? 

- Around that time. 

- We attended in one cooperation training with some guys... who had been there. Tough guys, and even then... it ended to shitstorm. 

- How about now? 

- Hah. Don't think too much. We are not a superpower. We can't afford losing guys like flies. It's not gonna happen again.

Arthur regretted he had mentioned it. 

- Yeah, you're right. I just have to get this blubber off my guts. 

- That's the talking! Jake cheered. 


*












Vendetta

He wakes up. His instincts are sharpened. Someone is coming up the stairs. Too quietly. He crouches and graps a stiletto. Steps are coming closer. 

He hides next to door. Revolver barrel sticks from doorstep. Figure is crouched a bit. 

He jumps forward and graps the arm. Revolver goes off. Both are blinded from flash and ears are rinning. He holds gunman's arm and pumps stabs with the knife. Figure cries out and folds. Last strike he aims at the throat. 

He hears how men yell downstairs. He runs before his bed and takes trousers and twin barrel lupara under it. 

He steps carefully in dark house. When he is at the lowest step, two figures move in the kitchen. One of them fires but misses. He empties both barrels at the figures. Outside men yell yet again. How many goddamn crooks are there? 

He reloads and after catching breath he yanks the front door open. One figure fires a shot, he feels sudden pain in his right arm. Lupara drops. Cursing he crouches at the balkony. Bullets rip the blanks. He draws Johnson pocket revolver from his pocket with left hand and stands up. He empties the cylinder. He crouches again and gasping reloads the revolver. Pain in the arms is daunting. But as no further shots are fired, he draws his belt off and wraps it around his bicep. There's only one thought in his head:

He has to warn others. 


--- 

Matteo! Mi padre, he's injured!

Hassling fills the balkony as Matteo is helped inside. He is plain and tired, but alive. 

- Mi figlio, mi caro figlio, what's happened? 

-They... came... at my house, Matteo gasps.

-How many, his godfather asks. 

- Five. Three in and two outside. All of them are now dealt with. I... reckon they were Martelli guys. 

- Martelli... Porgo! He is gonna suffer for this! godfather yells and shakes his fist. 

- Nicolosi! Come out! I'm here to make an offering! 

They look at each other. Men draw weapons and rush for windows. There are three cars and twenty armed men in their headlights at the front. Luparas, rifles, pistols. 

- What you want, you son of a bitch? 

Young man, with a big scar on his face, laughs heartily. 

- Watch your mouth, old man. I'm here to make you an offering, in the name of Giorgio Martelli. 

- Spit it out! 

- Very well. You give us half the share of your moonshining business. We've  heard you make good bucks with it. Then, you give us quarter of the doorman business you've got. 

- And what we get in return? 

Man laughs again. 

- So that we don't destroy you! Think, for once, you old hubby. The pigs are after us all! They want to see us hanged. We must unite, to fight them. 

- You have got a big mouth, young man. Is this how you mother taught you to talk to elders? She was a whore like the rest of the Martelli! Hear your own words. You want all but give nothing in return. I may be old but I have my mind still! You are gonna have even bigger mouth now! 

Godfather raises his pistol. Matteo's cousin empties his lupara at the man's head, blowing it off. Guns blaze. Matteo shoots through a window. Left hand and blood loss, accompanied by darkness, make aiming hard, but he empties his revolver at the Martellis. Couple of them leap from behind the cars and throw firebottles at the house. They are cut down but bottles shatter and fire starts to spread. Rest of the Martellis run into darkness. 

-Quick, we have to get everyone out! 

Later, they all stand on the street, watching their home burning down. 

- This. Is. War, godfather gasps. Flames reflect from his dark eyes. 

- We'll revenge this. All, Matteo says and clasp godfather's shoulder. 

- You will. You will, godfather says. A lone tear runs down his grooved cheek. 

Nicolocies wouldn't die without a fight. 

*







torstai 19. joulukuuta 2019

Chapter 1.1


Mike's Ford Raptor stopped at saloon. Black Mercedes SUV stood outside. 

- Fine carriage, Arthur said.

- Yeah, he has some money. Lots of money. Hopefully we can get our share.

- Let's hear him out, then.

They walked in. They knew the bartender. He looked at them and a worry shade glimpsed on his face. 

- I don't want any trouble, partner. 

- Don't worry, mate. We are here doing some business, and it seems there's no dickheads this time, Mike said and gave a telling look. 

- Ah, mister. Partner, these gentlemen are with me. Here, take what you want. Please, be my guests. 

Bald, Roman nosed man talked with British accent. He had a black suit and a striped tie. Arthur's hand touched instinctively boulge on his back. Personal guard was there, ready to shed some lead if necessary. 

- Sir, we are simple men. Even simpletons, kinda. So, we talk straight. You had some job opportunities for us? 

- Ah, yes, yes, I certainly have. Have you heard of security counselling? 

 - You mean private security? 

- Yes, some people call it like that, especially here in America, but we prefer security counselling. Less... Bad press, I suppose. 

- We don't care about bad press. Someone has to do the job. Even if it's dirty. 

Man smiled. 

- You sound just like men I need. More? 

- No thanks. We do business only sober. 

Man laughed heartily. 

- Of course, of course! Now, sir, if you don't mind, I suggest we move to my car. I have some... Calm place to discuss about business. 

Arthur and Mike looked at each other. 

- Fine, let's go. 

They started walking. Before front door Arthur grapped Mike's arm. 

- Listen. You think this is a good idea? 

- What other choices do we have? And you have that Austrian on your belt. Don't worry, mate. 

They continued and got inside car. When man was about to start the car, Arthur touched man's shoulder. 

- Lest go anywhere. Talk your business here. 

Man looked Arthur into eyes through backmirror. 

- Alright, sir. However you wish. 

Man leaned back and turned.

- You both were in the army? 

- Yes, in the same unit. We've been in Iraq and Astan. 

- For how long? 

- Three rotations. Both of us. 

- Why did you left the army? 

- I left because I got a good offer from my brother to join his construction company, Mike said. 

- And why are you here? 

- My brother's an idiot. He did some bad business... And angried wrong blokes. 

- Is there a price for your head? 

- For my head? No, not at all. My brother was in charge. He was forced to sell his company and I was fired. 

- How about your silent partner? 

Arthur coughed. 

- I was discharged because I didn't get the promotion in time. 

- Honorable or dishonorable? 

- Honorable. I wasn't just intrested to babysit idiots. 

Man laughed. 

- I like your partner. Honest chap. Although one has to wonder why he's carrying vest and gun. 

- He is a good soldier, Mike assured.

- I bet he's. But we are not doing just soldiering. We are operating in the shadows. Under radar. If you get into trouble, there will be no cavalry to save the day. You have to fend on your own. 

- We can do that, Mike smirked and laughed. - We have been in bad places. We aint some greenhorns. 

- Well, we shall see that. If you are still interested, contact this number after couple of days, man said and gave a plain card with only a phonenumber. - If you're answered, you've passed. Now, gentlemen, I wish you farewell. 

Mike and Arthur looked at each other. 

- Okay... we'll make a call. Thanks. I suppose. 

They hopped from the car. Man started the engine and drove away. 

- Quite a feller, Mike said. 

- Dandy little bastard, Arthur grumpled.  - Seemed a bit too fancy, if I'm honest. 

- Don't worry. We'll make it. Surely. 

They headed back to saloon to have some pints. 


*

















lauantai 23. marraskuuta 2019

Chapter I

- Hi, how's it going? Mike said and leaped inside. 

Arthur shrugged. 

- Well. At least I think so...

Mike took a chair and leaned on his elbows. Arthur's appartment was small, tidy but crude. Something that a bachelor could come by, but nothing too fancy. 

- Look, I have been thinking... Have you found a job?

- I? Yeah, I work at grocery store, packing stuff.

- You? At a grocery? I wouldn't imagine that.

- Me either. But, well... What else could I do? Like, a drop off from college, no other professional skills than killing people. There really aren't many business opportunities for that kind of guys, if I don't fancy robbing banks.

- Look, I might have some... Leads. 

- For robbing banks?

- Hah, no, not that kinda stuff. But close. Kinda.

- I'm not sure if I really want to hear. 

- Oh, you will. Look, I got acquittance with one fellow... He offers pretty good money. 

- How much?

- What do ya think if I say two-hundred grand per year? If you survive that long, of course.

- Fiuu. And you're really sure it's not about robbing banks?

- No, nothing like that. The same thing you did in the army. Only, now being paid like it should be.

- Private security? 

- Yeah, you nailed it.

- Arrr...do you know if this guy is... like, legimate?

- So that he's not cop or something?

- Yeah, along those lines... Or some conman.

- Well, there's only one way to find out... He hangs around at the bar near the park. Ya coming?

Arthur stood still and thought. When he got out, he had thought "Never again". But this "civilian life"... It felt so empty and meaningless. People so high flying and bragging on some pointless shit. He missed those boys, even though sometimes he had been ready to blow their heads off. 

- Yeah, I'm coming. Wait a sec.

Arthur opened a closet and took a bullet vest and a Glock 19 from the drawer. 

- Wait, you take a vest and gun? 

- Of course. What d'ya thougth, man? I never go outside without them.

- Ya know, this ain't a fucking Iraq or something. 

- Well, sometimes it pretty much feels like one. You should hear the gunshots at night. Like Baghdad in its prime. 

- Look, don't take offense... But have you got over things?

- None taken. Over what?

- Like...what happened in Helmand?

Arthur was silent. 

- Yeah, of course, dude. What kinda question was that?

- Well, I just wanted to check. You were a good soldier, mate. You know that, doncha? 

- Sometimes... There was so much shit going on. I got sick of it. 

- Yeah, I know... This dude, Nick's his name, he said they look for enlisted. They got officers, but lack boots on the ground.

- Someone has to get the shit done. Pretty boys aren't gonna cut it. 

- Yeah, exactly. That's why we're going, to get shit done. And earn some buck, righteously so. 

- I just hope there ain't too many pretty boys fuzzing around. I'm tired of them.

- Have you thought you'd be one of them? Like, you got to college. You'd have done them to end in 'form. If ya had taken that corporal exam, they'd have send ya to cadet school. 

- Nah. It's not for me. I'm not interested in babysitting some nerds that barely came off from their mothers' titties and jerk off for some fucking 'tube star. I wanna do business, not fricking herding. 

- Ya know, you were once one of them. I remember. 

- Nah, that's so long time ago... Like, a lifetime. Really, a lifetime. If some dude came at that day with his gf when I got to boot camp, that baby could serve in the Army by now. 

- Not really. We don't do child soldiers. Although you always couldn't believe so.

- Yeah. Now, Are we going or just sitting and chewing bullshit?

- Alright, let's go. Now, let me do the talking. And keep that Austrian on your belt. Ya know what happened last time.

*















lauantai 13. heinäkuuta 2019

Black rose

Wind blew hard outside. Its noise made the ones inside the ale house to touch up their coats and blankets. It was warm, but ruthlesness of the steppe was only a couple of feet away from them.

Then, the door opened. Or crashed open, would be better term, nearly tearing it off its hinges. Snow and freezing air stormed inside, like skeletons dancing around the room. All the eyes looked angrily at the one shameless enough to take the warmth away.

A small statured man strode to the table. Tall, black fur hat looked amusingly big for the man, being nearly as tall as he was. He had worn army overcoat, black trousers and boots needing some care. On his belt hang a cavalry saber, as worn as any other gear. His dark hair was wild, and boyish smirk glowed from those hollowed cheeks.

- What you'd have? asked the ale house keeper.

- A pint wouldn't make harm.

Keeper opened a valve and poured beer to the wooden pint. Guest took a long sip and smiled even more.

- Where are you coming from, keeper asked.

- I'm coming from Kyiv.

- Oh, I've heard there are those...those communists, bolsheviks and whatever. Bandits they are! Awful people, truly awful!

Guest just nodded keenly, mumbling something acceptable and sipped more of his beer.

Keeper and others started to relax. Guest seemed not to be one of them, dreaded communists, despite of his wild looks. Discussion started again, room began to be warm.

- Hey, you, go to feed the horses! You lazy little bastard! keeper suddenly shouted. A young, thin as leaf stableboy jumped into air and ran past the keeper, who slapped him to cheek.

- Oh my... These times, these times... World is being crazy, people rise against their kings and rulers... End of the world is near, hear me saying. I work my ass off so that those kind of lazy bastards can drink and whore around! keeper said behind his walrus moustache. Anger made his whole thick body to shake.

Time flew by, and the guest sipped last drops of his pint.

- Would you like more? keeper asked.

- No, thanks, this is enough, guest said.

- One kopek, keeper said. His voice was firm and his palm was demanding.

The guest smiled cheerfully and put his hand into the chest of his overcoat. He pulled it back, but instead of wallet he pointed a Nagant to the keeper's head and pulled the trigger.

The keepers corpse dropped like a sack of potatoes.

People jumped up horrified and looked at the guest.

- Comrads! This is the beginning of the new era! Mother-Anarchy has taken you to her warm comfort. This all, this all belongs to you now! It belongs to the people! Hail the revolution! Hail the workers and peasants! Dead to the kings, bourgeois and communists!

He was Nestor Makhno.

lauantai 27. huhtikuuta 2019

Afghantsy

It was a war with no victory.

I was a young university student, at my first year. Usually they were not drafted.

But I was.

My mother tried to talk to the relatives, to get me out. Earlier it had been possible to slip the draft, but because the number of deserters and draft-avoiders had been alarmingly high, politburo had announced that anyone who helped a deserter or to avoid draft, were regarded as a enemy of the state.

And those who were in the position of power knew too well what it meant.

From the distribution center I was transported to the training center, to the Central Asia. Corporals yelled at us and herd us around like sheep. The old looked at us with grim grins on their faces. It was chilly September.

Dedvoschina. It was a word that I learned to know.

We were nothing. Absolutely nothing. We had to salute the old, even the most simple and stupid privates. If we didn't, we would feel it later.

Barracks were cold and drafty. During the nights, moist froze to the walls. Food was what it was, after the cooks had taken the best bits and sold the middle. Our officers sold gasoline and ammunition, which meant that our APCs often didn't have enough fuel to train and we enough ammo to shoot. Commander of the training unit was an alcoholic. He came to duty near the mid-day, sat in his office couple of hours and drove away with his rusty Volga.

There were few soldiers from Central Asia, doing mostly manual labor. I didn't see them handle a gun once. They were low on the ranks - even lower than us. When we left, they stayed.

We were mostly Karelians, Lithuanians, Uralians. Far from home. Some of us were volunteers. I did not see any from Moscow or Petersburg, nor did I hear that anyone from those districts had served in Afghanistan. We were from small towns and rural districts.

After weeks of training, our motorized rifle battalion was deemed to be ready to be deployed. We had a short parade, we got even new uniforms for that. Before deployment, we got new gear. The old who stayed, told us that we would be dead by January.

After long road march and train transport we drove over the bridge to Afghanistan. The same bridge would become famous later when the last Soviet soldiers would withdraw across it.

It was 7th of December, 1982.

I had had some image of Afghanistan, but in a way I was shocked to see its state. It felt like travelling back in time. The road march was long. We stayed overnight at different towns on the way. I noticed how the veteran units rode on top of their APCs, instead of inside as we did. Roadsides were littered with wrecked tanks and trucks. Hinds and jets were in the air whole time.

Round villages there were elaborate web of ditches. Later on we would learn that Afghans used them like trenches, not needing to dig-in.

We were sent to Kabul, to relieve the battalion of the old. We met some soldiers from Afghan army. Their appearance didn't wake trust. Central Asians were the labor force here also, repairing the damage that insurgents and saboteurs did. Their gear was old and worn-out. They didn't like us, Slavs. I talked with one, very old starchina. He was a reservist, been here for ages. He said that when they first had gotten there they had been thought to be only peacekeepers and builders. But when mujahideen had started to attack them, they had lost great number of comrades. They had lacked training, ammo and heavy weaponry. Many of the Central Asians were Muslims, they didn't want to fight against their brothers in faith. So, they were relegated to other duties.

Our first mission was to search local village. A column of Kamaz were ambushed at its vicinity. The corpses of the drivers were mutilated. Commander of the forces in Kabul was furious. We were sent there to revenge. We had a company of the old with us, military police. They had the trademark of Afghantsy - large moustaches.

We attacked like in the textbook, with artillery bombardment. Our APCs drove around 200 meters away from buildings and we disembarked. There were dust and explosions, noise was deafening. Hinds flew above us and shot everything that moved. Our lieutnant told us to search the houses. I saw my first dead there. He was an old man, lying on the dust. Shrapnels had cut him into pieces. We all stopped to look at him. Our lieutnant came and yelled us to move, he kicked and shoved us forward. I still can see the old man, as if I were there.

We did not find anyone who looked like mujahideen. Only old men and women with children. Dead bodies, around twenty. Rest of the villagers were either fled or stared at us scared.

The sun was already setting when we left the village. We didn't get far until we were ambushed. I just heard echo of the explosion and felt when our driver braked. Suddenly walls of the vehicle bang like someone was hitting them with a hammer. Gunner started shooting, I don't know how he could see anything. The sun sets really fast in Afghanistan, it was totally dark outside. Our lieutnant ordered us to disembark. Yuri, a young Karelian tried to open the side hatch of the right side. He was hit instantly to the throat. Vlad, a boy from Ural, opened the left hatch and jumped out. He ran couple of meters, then there was a flash. He had run onto a mine. He screamed but no one dared to run at him. He continued to scream all too long. It ripped our nerves.

We started shooting inside the APC but couldn't see a thing through the small ports. We just blasted magazine after magazine. We heard more explosions. Then the gunner started yelling that insurgents were firing RPGs. We had to jump out.

Mujahidens were all around us. Muzzle flashes were as numerous as stars in the sky. I don't remember well what exactly happened during that evening and night. I was so scared that I could only lay down and try to be as small target as I could. I have no idea how I managed to survive but apparently we were able to hold our own. We stayed there until morning, when a rescue column got there. I did not have a scratch, but my magazines were empty. Empty cases and burned APCs were around. Blood stains where people were killed or wounded. I suddenly noticed how cold I felt. Fear and addrenaline had kept me warm but now I was freezing. Half our platoon was killed. The whole battalion had taken heavy casualties. I got a ribbon and promotion to junior sergeant.

It didn't make me feel any better.

I went to hospital to see my comrades. The guard didn't want to let me in, but I bribed him with cigarettes. It was called central military hospital, but it was closer to something else. Floors were dirty, many doctors and nurses had blood stained jackets which were once white. My comrades, Dimitri and Alex, had minor wounds from shrapnels. They told me they wanted out of the hospital. Patients died to lack of hygiene, bad food and negligence of staff. They asked me to smuggle them from the hospital back to our unit. To their great disappointment, I had no guts for it at the time. Boys got out couple of weeks later, but they were gotten in so bad shape in the hospital that they were discharged from duty.

Afghan women are usually under a strict supervision of the elders, although in Kabul they had a bit more freedom than usually. There were a few Soviet nurses. I actually managed to take one for a short date during my evening leave. She told me that solidarity programs they reported in newspapers were not succesful. It was difficult to gain acceptance from people that were bombed yesterday. They had asked for more resources for patients, but in vain. Hygiene was so bad overall that most patients were there because of sickness and sexual transmitted diseases rather than because of insurgents. The whole army was rotting inside, she said. Especially officers. She said that they were harassing nurses, making suggestions. Often drunk. Some days ago a baddly burned soldier slapped her on ass when she was examining another patient. I asked her for sympathy. Most of us were just young boys who had to spent time themselves, day after day. It was natural that they couldn't help themselves when seeing a woman. She said she was not a whore and didn't want to be treated as one. The date was not overally succesful but it was better than killing time at the barracks. I didn't see her again, supposedly she got a transfer or was transferred to another place.

During next months we did many attacks on the surrounding villages and towns. Every time we were prepared to face mujahideen on the battlefield, but every time we met only the same: old men and women, children. Young men were not there - our interpreter, Afghan army officer translated village elder's words: young men hide away because they are afraid that we would kill them. Our new lieutnant, who had replaced our previous one because he had gotten blood poisoning from some scratch, told the elder that its just insurgency propaganda and uttermost lie. We don't kill innocent, he said. Those youngsters are not hiding because they are afraid, they are hiding because they are mujahideen, he yelled.

Our lieutnant told this while there was still smoke in the air from the craters from rockets of our gunships.

After 7 months in Afghanistan, I knew I would not survive whole two years' service there. We got ambushed, time and time again, while responding to them by destroying villages. I had written many letters to my mom, to try to persuade our relatives to transfer me to some other place. It was tricky to get the message through mail, because I knew they would censor everything negative. There were good signs, however. Perhaps because I didn't want to slip the draft, I just wanted a transfer. But it took weeks the post to reach my hometown, then my mom to contact relatives, and then getting the answer back.

My mates had told me to grow moustache. I resisted but they made me. They said that I look like a rookie without them. So I did grow moustache, but they were so thin that you could only see them in hazy lighting.

One day we were on guard duty out in the field, on a supply depot. I had found a puppy from the village we last time searched. Afghans don't have great sympathy for stray dogs, I saw many pitiful sights of dogs limbing wounded around, struck by a truck or a bullet. I had presumed that its mother was killed, so I had taken it. Finally you have got yourself a real suka, my mates yelled when they saw it. I kept it in my breast pocket of my jacket, so small it was. My mate took a picture of me and my comrade Mykhail, a big burly man. He was a strong as a bull, coming from Ukraine.

One evening I felt myself really sick. I vomitted several times. My mates said that I had sunstroke or dehydration. It lasted all night. At morning I went to our medic, who was pretty reluctant to sent me to the hospital. It happened only after Mykhail had had a "friendly conversation" with the medic.

I was diagnozed with parasite infection. During my time at the hospital I quickly realized why Dimitri and Alex wanted away. I was really afraid of dying there.

Fate has sometimes odd sense of humour. I got a letter from my mother that I would be transferred to border duty on the border of China. On the same day doctor came and told me that my health was so poor that he would request a discharge from duty due to medical reasons. I had to write to my mother that I didn't need the transfer anymore because I would be coming home! Unfortunately, the transfer had been decided in different bureau than my discharge, which would cause problems later on (and thus I had to wait for three weeks at the distribution center and assert that no, I hadn't deserted and no, I wasn't killed, I had been discharged).

It took me years to recover from what I experienced in Afghanistan. I had hard time to concentrate on my studies once again. I woke at nights, sweating rife. I drank too much. We, Afghantsy, were disdained, especially in Lithuania. We had served the regime that surpressed the independence. It took years for the Soviet state to recognize that there had been war in Afghanistan, that it was a war with casualties and veterans. They finally did, but it didn't last long before the whole state collapsed. The rotten system. It was much later that I read about PTSD. I had left my studies and worked as a carpenter. I tried to apply several times again to university, but I was rejected. It was only in 2000s when I finally got accepted to study psychology, as an old, life-battered guy.

We caused pain and death to Afghanistan. We did some good, but it was drowned in blood of too many, innocent people.

Afghanistan took a lot from me. It took my life, although not as violently as from my fallen comrades, mates. But it took the toll that is indispensable.

It took my youth.

People hate us for what we did. They are right, but they don't take into account that most of us hate ourselves for what we did. There is no more the state that was responsible, there are only the people to blame. We served the system, but moreover we were the slaves of it. It was rotten, but we had no choice.

We have already all paid the price, in a way or another.

*