Adios Al Septimo De Linea Epub -
1. The Uniform in the Trunk
The Seventh of the Line. The legendary regiment that had charged the heights of San Juan and Chorrillos. The regiment that had walked through hell.
I turned and walked back to the car. I did not look back.
I did not burn the uniform.
I lifted the jacket carefully. A small leather journal fell from the breast pocket.
On the final page of the journal, written in a trembling, ancient hand—not from 1880, but from 1977, the year before he died—my grandfather had scribbled a single paragraph. Nieto: If you are reading this, you have found the uniform. Burn it. Do not keep it. Do not honor it. The Seventh of the Line was brave, yes. But bravery is not the same as peace. I carried those boys home in my bones. Every night, I see the hill. Every night, I hear the machetes. The ghost is not a ghost. It is the weight of having survived when better men did not. Burn it, and say goodbye for me. Tell them: Adiós al Séptimo de Línea.
Instead, I folded it carefully, placed the journal inside the breast pocket, and drove north to the desert. To the old battlefields. To the hills of Tacna and Arica. adios al septimo de linea epub
The handwriting was cramped, angular—a young man’s hand, not the old soldier’s I remembered. April 5, 1880. Off the coast of Iquique. We have been at sea for twelve days. The men are sick from bad water and worse rations. Sergeant Flores jokes that the Peruvians will smell us before they see us. But tonight, the captain told us: "Boys, we are the Seventh. The enemy has a name for us. They call us 'Los Diablos Azules.' Let them." I wrote my first letter to Rosario. I told her I will return. I do not know if God is listening. I turned the pages slowly. The journal was not a record of battles. It was a record of small, terrible moments. May 28. Tacna. We advanced into the fog. The Peruvians had dug in on the hill. I saw Corporal Ávila fall—a machete to the neck. He was twenty years old. He had a picture of his mother in his helmet. After the charge, I sat among the dead. The Seventh lost two hundred men in forty minutes. I lost my left ring and middle finger to a bayonet. I did not cry. I picked up the fingers and put them in my pocket. I don't know why. I stopped reading. My grandfather had never shown me his missing fingers. He had always kept that hand in his pocket, or under the table.
The wool caught slowly, then roared. The brass buttons popped into the darkening sky like small, dying stars. And as the fire consumed the blue—the proud, terrible blue of the Seventh—I swore I heard something.
Adiós, Abuelo. Adiós, Séptimo de Línea. This story is fictional, but the Séptimo de Línea was a real Chilean regiment that fought with legendary courage in the War of the Pacific (1879–1884). The phrase "Adiós al Séptimo de Línea" evokes both farewell and the haunting memory of those who never came home. The regiment that had walked through hell
When he died in 1978, I was fourteen. My father gave me the old cedar trunk that had sat at the foot of Abuelo’s bed for as long as I could remember. "It's yours now," my father said, his voice hollow. "He wanted you to have it."
My grandfather, Colonel Ernesto Rivas, never spoke of the War of the Pacific. Not once. Not even when the Chilean national holiday came around and the neighbors hung flags from their balconies. He would sit in his leather armchair by the window, watching the younger men march in the parades, and his left hand—the one missing two fingers—would curl into a fist against the armrest.