Note: While authors are asked to place warnings on their stories for some moderated content, everyone has different thresholds, and it is your responsibility as a reader to avoid stories or stop reading if something bothers you.
Him in the Dust - Part 1 - Prologue. The Secret
Portsmouth, UK, late 2005
I have a secret, however, it’s not what you think. But you know secrets are funny things? You have them, but you almost always tell someone, so the very notion of a secret is nonsense. But this secret could cost lives, so it's going to remain my secret. At least for now!
So where do we begin? Well, let me tell you who I am. My name is Seb Biden, I’m 18 and, according to my parents, I am a proud serving Pvt in the British Army...just!. ‘Proud,’ as in what my parents are, not me….And ‘just’, because 2 days ago I finished my Basic Training.
More about that later!
So let me just say from the outset, I come from a military family, in fact a long line of them as my father likes to remind everyone, so it was natural that I join, too. Natural for them, of course, not me. Joining the army was not something I really wanted to do, but when you’re brainwashed by your parents to join, you can end up doing it without even knowing why. Hmm; well that’s how it seemed in my mind anyway. No, my passion was to become a jockey. You see, my love of horses far outweighed my love of the army. I'd ridden horses since I was just out of nappies.
I think my mum supported me in private, but never in front of my dad. She was an army wife after all, and so in a way she was brainwashed into that life herself. She’d say she fell in love with the man, not the military, but over the years the lines became blurred and she now went along with everything he said.
My dad, a retired military man himself, is void of emotion. His life is the military, still, but he does not speak about himself. Everything about my dad is honour, status and pride. He tells his military conservative friends that he produced children of good stock. Both of us blond, blue eyes and strong. A horrifying thing, to think of yourself as an item. I think he loves us. Still, he is a good dad, and a problem solver, but strict and concrete in his views. What he said went and when all was said and done my brother and I just did as we were told.
Oh, did I tell you I had an older brother? No I didn't, did I? Well, yeah, Robbie. He’s 21 and you guessed it, army! Stationed in Germany actually, and he says it’s pretty good there, when we actually get to talk to him. He writes mostly. My mum always says a good letter is better than a thousand emails. But we talk on the phone a little. He asks me how I am, and I say the same back and that is it, the phone goes back to mum.
So yeah, back to horses! I was one of those awkward kids in my early teens without many friends and much more comfortable down at the stables. I would take my neighbour’s horse Joey out for walks and runs. I’d gotten really good by the time I was 12, but when I reached 15 my dad had put his foot down, and between him and my mum they said that I should join the Army Cadets. ‘Go be like your brother,’ they said. ‘Go live some outdoor life!’ Outdoors? I was always outdoors. Anyway, I applied. I did because I was told to, and if you’re my dad’s son, you do what you're told. But in my head I had a plan. I thought once I joined I could bide my time in the Cadets and when I was 18 I could get out. That was when I could launch into my passion of becoming a jockey, having satisfied my parents that I had stuck a uniform on and done a few expeditions and learnt some survival skills.
I thought I’d hate it, but I had no choice. However, in tandem, I thought it much better to do something military now to excite my dad, and then I can go ride horses hopefully with his blessing after.
The thing is, to my surprise, I loved it in the Cadets, and realized that maybe the army wouldn't be such a bad career choice. Well, now I’m 18! Was I destined to be a Jockey at five-foot-eleven?
Far too tall! Very fit, but I’d be useless as a jockey, right? My heavy lump on the horse would slow the poor thing down. I mean I can’t lose height. Maybe the army was a good choice. Would I like it? Better than being a slow jockey, right?
Were these my thoughts? Was this my life? Who said I would be a poor, slow, useless jockey?
- 18
- 6
- 1
Note: While authors are asked to place warnings on their stories for some moderated content, everyone has different thresholds, and it is your responsibility as a reader to avoid stories or stop reading if something bothers you.
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