The Flicker Between Trenches

The mud never dried. Even when the sun angled low over the trenches at dusk, painting gold over blood and bone, the ground squelched beneath Private Thomas Leary’s boots. He scraped filth from his fingernails and shivered. The Great War had stolen more than warmth.

He was supposed to be at rest, but Thomas could not sleep. Night after night, his dreams twisted into something else: flashes of another world, of colors too vivid for the battered landscape around him. Sometimes he’d see his brother Arthur—face pale with death—and wake up gasping.

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He’d begun to suspect that nothing here was quite real. After all, how did a glowing rectangle—smooth glass surrounded by a slim black frame—end up mounted on the wall above his cot? In this world of rifles and telegrams, it looked out of place, yet no one ever commented on it. When Thomas reached out at midnight, tracing his fingers along its edge, it hummed to life.

The screen blossomed with color—red poppies so bright they seared his eyes; blue skies without a single zeppelin or shellburst. There were moving images: newsreels from distant cities and strange stories flickering across its surface. Sometimes, if he pressed the right spot on the remote (how had that ended up in his hand?), he could even hear music. It felt like cheating—a window into another time that offered both escape and torment.

Tonight, he watched old footage play on the VIZIO 40-inch Full HD display: men laughing in Parisian cafés, children spinning hoops in sunlit parks. When he switched to another channel, the past bled into nightmare—trenches crawling with rats and shadows that moved without form. The TV’s clarity was almost cruel; every detail sharper than memory itself.

His fellow soldiers never seemed to notice the device. Only Thomas watched as rain slashed across the screen one moment and revealed letters scrawled in mud the next:

I REMEMBER YOU.

He dropped the remote onto his blanket, heart pounding. He thought of Arthur—his only brother—dead these past six months from shrapnel to the chest. The official story was chaos during an assault near Ypres, but Thomas remembered another version: a whispered accusation in the barracks, a vengeful glance from Private Mills before dawn.

Vengeance takes strange forms when you’re trapped between worlds.

The next evening, while others gambled or wrote letters home by candlelight, Thomas put on headphones and let himself fall into another channel—the kind only he seemed able to access through that odd platform labeled "Home." There was an archive there: messages left behind by others who’d passed through this place. Names he recognized and voices that crackled with static:

“Find him,” one message hissed.

“Mills is not who you think.”

“Nothing ends here.”

Was this war just a pattern repeating itself? A simulation run for some audience beyond his comprehension? Thomas scrolled through free channels with trembling fingers until he found something labeled "Truths Buried." The episode started with footage so lifelike it made him nauseous: Mills slipping poison into Arthur’s canteen, then slipping away as artillery thundered.

Thomas stared at the evidence displayed so plainly before him—clear as daylight on that impeccable screen—and grief twisted inside him like barbed wire. He turned up the brightness until every shadow in Mills’ face stood out in unforgiving contrast.

The next morning came heavy with fog and dread. At roll call, Thomas’s hands shook as he clutched his rifle and searched for Mills’ gaze among the ranks. Mills smiled; it was wrong—the smile of someone who knew more than he should about the nature of their suffering.

That night—the final night—Thomas returned to his cot and sat before the TV once more. He connected headphones via Bluetooth so no one else would hear what played: a recording from Arthur himself.

“If you’re seeing this,” Arthur’s voice said quietly from beyond time’s barrier, “then you know what happened wasn’t fate or luck.”

Tears streaked Thomas’s cheeks as the story unfolded again—Arthur’s laughter before battle; their pact to watch each other’s backs; betrayal snaking through muddy corridors while shells fell overhead.

He set down the headphones gently and stood up. The lines between reality and simulation blurred under flickering light. Was this world a test? A prison? Or simply a story someone else wanted to watch play out again?

With grim resolve, Thomas confronted Mills beneath silent stars—the confrontation inevitable as sunrise after bombardment. Words didn’t matter anymore; justice did. When it was done and Mills lay still, Thomas stumbled back to his quarters where only static greeted him from the sleek black frame on his wall.

In those last moments before everything reset—a familiar sensation now—Thomas stared at himself reflected in glass: tired eyes ringed with loss; hands stained by vengeance achieved but never satisfying.

The TV flickered off for good this time as new orders arrived over loudspeakers no one else could hear: "Simulation complete. Restarting scenario."

He understood now: memory was both weapon and wound in this endless war—but as long as he remembered Arthur’s face alive with sunlight—not just dying beneath foreign skies—he could endure whatever reality demanded next.

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