What was in kiowas rucksack
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Functional Functional. Functional cookies help to perform certain functionalities like sharing the content of the website on social media platforms, collect feedbacks, and other third-party features. Performance Performance. It was a mistake, and Kiowa had died. He'll tell Kiowa's father that the blame lies with him. They never should have camped there. The young soldier is still shaking, and he seems to be searching for something in the field. Jimmy Cross goes over to the boy. The boy blames himself, too.
He and Kiowa had been very close, and that night, he'd switched on his flashlight to show Kiowa a picture of his girlfriend, and then the field had exploded with mortars. He heard Kiowa scream, and he crawled toward Kiowa. His head was under the surface of the mud, and the boy grabbed Kiowa's boot, but the field was pulling him under, and so he let go.
Now he's digging frantically in the mud. Jimmy Cross asks him what he's looking for, and the boy says he's looking for his girlfriend's picture. Jimmy Cross leaves him alone. Norman Bowker finds Kiowa; his heel is sticking out. Mitchell Sanders, Bowker, and Azar try to pull Kiowa out of the mud, but he's stuck. They call Henry Dobbins and Rat Kiley over, but the body still won't come out. The men start to dig.
The rest of the platoon comes over, except for Jimmy Cross and the young soldier. They finally get Kiowa out. It's horrible. Cross thinks of Kiowa and the crime that is his death. He concludes that although the order to camp came from a higher power, he made a mistake letting his men camp on the dangerous riverbank.
Meanwhile, Jimmy Cross finishes composing the letter in his head and reflects that he never wanted the responsibility of leadership in the first place—he signed up for Reserve Officers Training Corps without giving thought to the consequences. He blames himself for making the wrong decision, concluding that he should have followed his first impulse and removed the men from the field.
In the distance he notices the shaking body of a young soldier and goes over to speak to him. After the platoon has spent a half a day wading in the field, Azar ceases his joking. Unable to move it, they call over Dobbins and Kiley, who also help pull. Harrowed and relieved, the men clean him up and then try to take their mind off him. Azar apologizes for the jokes. He notices the unnamed soldier, still searching for the missing picture.
But Cross ignores him, choosing instead to float in the muck, thinking about blame, responsibility, and golf. The sight of the actual body and the feeling of pulling it out of the earth that threatens to swallow it makes him feel guilty.
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