The next field was held by German machine gunners that had dug themselves in like ticks, eager for blood and just as hard to remove. The squad that the snipers had met up with went in first and got halfway across the field when the German gunner opened up, chewing several GIs into raw meat. The rest found themselves pinned down, unable to move as bullets whipped overhead.
“It’s a goddamn slaughter,” Mulholland announced, watching in horror through a gap in the hedge as one soldier tried to rush the Germans and was nearly cut in half by a burst. “If we don’t do something, the next squad through here is going to walk into the same trap.”
Cole had the solution. He crawled back into the hedgerow to where the German sniper had been and followed his tracks down into the killing field. From there, it was hard to tell where the sniper had gone, but he could see the German machine gunners at work from his concealed position.
He heard a noise behind him and spun, crouching low and pulling his .45 at the same time, but it was only the French girl following him.
“What are you doing?” he snapped, annoyed.
“Same as you,” she said. “Killing Germans.”
She carried a battered old rifle that looked as likely to blow up in her face as shoot straight, but Cole supposed that was the best that the French Resistance could get. It reminded him a lot of some old mountain rifle from back home. He looked the rifle over doubtfully, but liked the determined expression on her face. It was her country, after all, so as far as he was concerned she could have at it if she wanted to snipe at the Jerries with that antique. He nodded, and they crept out of the hedge together.
The machine gunners were busy shooting up the squad and they didn’t notice Cole hunkered at the edge of the field. He got the German gunner’s helmet in his sights and punched a bullet through the steel. Another man grabbed for the machine gun, and Cole shot him as well. He was about to shoot the third man reaching for the handles on the machine gun when something went bang off to his right. He’d damn near forgotten the French girl.
Her bullet only kicked up dirt at the edge of the German foxhole, which got the machine gunner’s attention. He swiveled the weapon in their direction and the black hole of the machine gun’s muzzle looked as big as the moon through Cole’s rifle sight. He let his breath out, fired, and nailed the German before he could depress the trigger on the machine gun.
“That was my target,” he muttered.
“You shoot too slow,” she said.
“At least I hit what I shoot at.”
What was left of the American squad out in the middle of the field got up and dusted themselves off. Several torn, bloody bodies lay scattered in the grass where the German machine gunners had caught them.
“So far we’ve captured two fields and lost maybe ten men,” Cole said. “This war ain’t goin’ so well, if you ask me.”
“Americans have no stomach for a fight,” Jolie said. “Where is your anger at the enemy? You do not know how to hold a grudge.”
For the first time since leaving the English coast, Cole laughed. “Darlin’, you don’t know the half of it. My people back home invented that there word. We got grudges against other families, we got grudges against Yankees, we got grudges against the government. And right about now, I got a serious grudge against Germans.”
“Then let us go shoot some more,” Jolie said.
“Keep talkin’ like that and you’re goin’ to get me all hot and bothered, missy.”
Jolie snorted like a horse, which Cole thought wasn’t very French lady like, but he followed along as they headed back to join up with the other snipers. They hadn’t been able to do much good in the last firefight, but at least Meacham had recovered somewhat and didn’t look so pale.
They crossed the field and went through a gap in the hedge that opened onto a narrow dirt road. A large American squad was moving along it in the distance, and at the head of the unit Cole could see a Sherman tank. It was the first one he had seen in action away from the beach, but he wasn’t sure how much good it could do out here. The hedges were so dense and the openings between fields were so tight that tanks were confined to the country roads, which were heavily mined. In addition, German squads armed with anti-tank rockets lay in wait.
To make matters worse for the tanks, somewhere out there were heavily armored German Tiger tanks, which would be more than a match for the Sherman tanks. Above the distant rumble of the tank engine, Cole could hear the rattle of small arms fire and the heavier thump of artillery. Somebody was catching hell somewhere.
“Miss Molyneux, where does this road go?” Lieutenant Mulholland wanted to know.
“We are moving toward St. Lo,” Jolie said. “But this road does not go there directly.”
“Well, it’s a start,” Mulholland said. “We’re going to stay on this road until called upon to deploy against German snipers.”