I was five when they took me. They stormed our school and shipped everyone off to a training camp. Our town became controlled by them and then it was deserted, because everyone was forcibly shipped off to war.
Our army was supreme again. Our group was promoted. We became the elite elitists. We mostly kept control over our establishments. We did some diplomacy deals, not many. We were top for six years.
Until one day, the other five came back. They were faster, and much more aggressive than they were before.
"Stay out of here!" I yelled at them, using their frequency.
And one of them answered back, but it was not one of the voices I'd heard before. These people were different. "You better move or you're going to die."
"We are soldiers. We are prepared to die. We've been prepared since they day we were born." And I showed them my face.
"Whoa, we don't kill kids."
"We are soldiers." It was my brother.
One backed off. "They're all kids," he said.
"Everyone back off." The leader said. And they backed off. They retreated.
They were cowards. We would've fought to the last man.
We met them several times. All of them ended in stalemate. We were equal.
Until Christmas day when I was 14. We fought and we lost. We came back alive, yes. But life wasn't important to a soldier. Only victory was.
Our home was destroyed, and we finally were aware of our actions. We all knew we'd been brainwashed. There were literally hundreds of us, without families or anyone. We had no where to go. No one wanted us, we used to be the enemy. Technically we were still in the army. We never signed any release papers, we never dropped out. We were just lost, now.
A program was set up to help us. I started my first year of school since kindergarten. The people weren't nice to me, they hated me for what I did. They understood I was brainwashed, but they didn't care. They called me names, refused to sit near me. Some of the teachers didn't like me or any of us. They had fought in the army against us. And now, they were supposed to teach us to make us respectable members of society.
And what was even worse than all the teasing and stares was the fact that we got called away in the beginning of the year. We were still in the army.
And we fought just as hard as we did before. We fought just as long. And we lost again. We were defeated on Christmas day, just like the year before. Christmas was never a happy day for us.
We returned to school in the beginning of the second semester. And it was even worse than before.
I walked to my locker with one of my acquaintances. She had kept my combination for me. She left for her first class as I was still trying to get into my locker.
I asked the people around what day it was, as our school was on a rotating schedule, but someone told me to figure it out, and no one would answer me. So I shut my locker. I realized I had locked my purse in and went to open it again. A group of boys crowded behind me, trying to memorize my combination. I hid it from them and opened it, got my purse out and made sure it was locked. They laughed and whispered "Nazi" behind my back.
I finally found my first class, history, and noticed that the seating arrangement was different. I went up to the teacher, and asked where my seat was. He didn't judge and was nice, and he told me, and said that the assignments for the last few days were on it. (I had kept up with my schooling while I was away, so I only had the assignments to do that I missed while traveling.)
I looked through the stuff I was given and found a booklet that was the translated Nazi recruiting manual. We were learning about the Nazis. I knew it was just a coincidence, but the boys at my locker were whispering "I bet she'll enjoy this lesson" as well as "She must know a lot about it." They were all intended for me to hear. I could've cried. But soldiers don't cry.
