Inside a struct, each member's offset in memory is based on their size and alignment. Note that this is implementation specific
E.g. if char takes 1 byte, short takes 2 bytes and int takes 4 bytes:
structure Node{
char c1; // 1 byte
// 1 byte padding (next member requires 2 byte alignment)
short s1; // 2 bytes
char c2; // 1 byte
// 3 bytes padding (since next member requires 4 byte alignment)
int i1; // 4 bytes
};
This also depends on your compiler settings and architecture, and can also be modified.
If you packed this structure properly (by rearranging the order of members), you could fit it into 8 bytes, not 12 bytes (by switching c2 with s1).
The reason for alignment enforcement is that the hardware can do certain operations faster with data that have a natural alignment; otherwise it would have to perform some bitmasking, shifting and ORing to construct the data before operating on it.