The engineer blazed away at the still living, screaming rag doll, its flesh and bone inextricably joined with the metal tracks. He missed and the submachine gun fell silent. In horror, Chekov fumbled with a spare magazine as the awful apparition was lifted up at the back of the tank and fed into the top running gear legs first.
The track dragged the squealing American through the gap between itself and the hull, carving, peeling and snapping unrelentingly. Chekov fired the whole magazine and bullets struck home, the suffering mercifully ended, the mangled remains falling away at the front of the tank.
The IS-II drove on, heading for the Americans who had charged the village.
He watched as five of his men ran forward waving their arms, the distinctively tall Iska amongst them waving just the one good arm. They were trying to obstruct the leviathan’s progress, risking their lives to turn it aside to save the petrified wounded men on the ground.
It did turn, heading off down the road it had come up earlier that morning.
Chekov recovered his feet and reloaded. He could not take his eyes off the gory remains of the officer destroyed by the IS-II.
Nothing he had ever seen was more awful.
His men moved on, checking every body.
One of them stood over a shallow depression and started calling his comrades, slipping more rounds into his rifle as he shouted.
Chekov called for him to wait and he painfully hobbled over to where his man had found a survivor.
The large bald-headed American soldier was clearly in excruciating pain, his right leg snapped at mid-calf and virtually at right angles to its proper position, sharp bone protruding from the open wound.
Other obvious injuries included the upper right arm and a superficial but messy chest wound.
The IS-II’s HE shell had done the extra work on Collins.
Chekov looked down at the man and decided that there had been enough killing for today.
More soldiers arrived to assist in the fight, and a medical unit was called over, the American being placed in their hands.
As the wounded man was lifted carefully onto a stretcher, he turned his head to Chekov.
“Spassiba Comrade.”
Chekov smiled. ‘
“Dosvidanya Amerikan.”
Chekov stumbled and limped over to the village, where he noted Iska and the ancient truck driver in animated conversation about the battle, occasionally interrupted by the medics at work. The former was receiving medical attention from a male doctor and his companion seemed to be relishing having his head bandaged by a wonderfully attractive young nurse.
Their laughter was infectious and by the time Chekov got to them, he was smiling for no reason whatsoever.
Clearly the two had acquired a bond somewhere along the line and he would enquire later, but for now, he had to look after his men.
Iska formally introduced him to the old soldier and dismissed Chekov’s concern at his wound. Making sure both Pavel Iska and Pyotr Harunin were fine, for that was the old man’s name apparently, the commander did the rounds of his battered troops.
Silence fell across the valley and the gutter fight that had been the Battle of Trendelburg came to a final close.
Chapter 52 – THE FRENCH
Deception, in order to be fully effective, must be practised upon friend and enemy in equal measure.
Eisenhower had been awake for some time, woken from his light slumber by an agitated orderly summoning him to a crisis in the making.
Without shaving or washing, he had responded and discovered that his enemy had not slept and had used the worst thunderstorms in a hundred years to mask assaults along a broad front.
The phone lines were humming as his senior commanders called in with situation reports, more often than not negative reports describing enemy progress and allied units being pushed back.
Now, as morning really took hold, there seemed to be a surreal pause in operations. Almost as if the enemy were collectively taking a breather and gathering themselves for another effort.
Up to the lull, there had been little good news and a lot of bad. The recently confirmed loss of Trendelburg meant that the American units on the Weser had only one route to escape by, and Eisenhower confirmed with both Bradley and Tedder that this route would be preserved and defended at all costs.