"before fresh divisions come up?" It was unprecedented for Starukhin to ask such a question, so totally devoid of swagger. It brought home the seriousness of the situation to Malinsky.
The front commander put down his cigarette and pushed back his sleeve. He checked his watch. To his surprise, he found that it was full morning. It would be broad daylight outside.
"Twelve hours," he guessed, wishing Chibisov was on hand, ready with his clear-cut, confident answers.
A staff officer approached the two generals. From the movement of his eyes, Malinsky could see that the officer was far more worried about Starukhin's possible reaction to his presence than about Malinsky.
Malinsky's stare caused Starukhin to turn.
"Well?" Starukhin said, in a voice of measured restraint.
"Comrade Commanders," the staffer said, looking back and forth between them. "The Third Brigade of the Forty-ninth Corps is being overrun."
The sounds of combat action reverberated in the middle distance.
When large-caliber shells struck, the roughly erected tentage sheltering the area between the vehicles of Anton's command post shivered, 310
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jouncing the maps lining the canvas walls. The radios sputtered with grim updates. The manning of the command post had been reduced so that a defensive perimeter could be established at the edge of the grove.
There was still no enemy contact in the immediate vicinity, but American forces had passed by on both flanks.
"Try to raise corps again," Anton said to the staff at large. "There are helicopters. We've been promised helicopters." He half remembered a meeting in the night with the corps commander. They had spoken of helicopters that would come to the rescue.
Anton had a budding suspicion that his staff had begun to work around him, struggling to carry out his orders to block every key intersection and to establish a hasty defense. They had been caught, and caught badly. The brigade, the entire corps, was a splendid offensive weapon, well-structured to fight meeting engagements. But they had moved too swiftly, brigades out of contact with one another, and with gaps between elements of the individual brigades. It had all been too fast, and the intelligence had been too slow, and now they were paying the price.
Yet even if all of that was true, the failure remained his, Anton realized.
He tried to blame the acid sickness in his guts and the fever and his flesh rubbed so raw it hurt to sit. And the dizziness that made it difficult to stand. He should have turned over the brigade to someone more capable.
But to whom? Where did duty end? What would his father have thought? Perhaps even that he was a coward. A Malinsky brought low by a bad digestion. In any event, it would have shamed the old man. And Anton would not do it. No matter what it cost.
He thought of Zena, of all the things he had to tell her. They often talked together. They shared everything. Yet it seemed to him now that an incredible amount had been left unspoken.
"Where are the helicopters?" Anton asked suddenly.
"Comrade Commander, we can't reach the corps."
"Try manual Morse."
"Comrade Commander, we've tried everything."
"Don't tell me that you can't do this and can't do that," Anton shouted.
"I'll try to relay through the Fourth Brigade."
"Why didn't you tell me we have communications with the Fourth Brigade?"
There was no response. Anton looked around him. Work had almost stopped. Several officers stared at him.
"What is the situation of the Fourth Brigade?" Anton demanded.
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"They are . . . in contact. To the north of us. Comrade Commander, you listened to the report as it came in."
Anton tried to make sense of this. The north was the wrong side. He remembered that much. And the Americans were to the north of them now.
"Report on subordinate units," Anton demanded. "We must form a counterattack force." He tried desperately to remember the formulas, the rules, how the schools and manuals insisted it must be done. But he only remembered faces without names.
Then Zena returned. Zena enjoyed nakedness. She said she wanted to live where there was always sun and no one needed to wear any clothing at all, and Anton always pictured that place as Cuba, but empty of everyone but the two of them. Beaches. Sun. The sun was enormous now, blinding him.
He would need to go outside soon. But he struggled to wait until the last possible moment, punishing himself. He would not abandon his post.
"Comrade Commander"—the chief of staff placed his hand on Anton's shoulder—"Comrade Commander . . . " He shook Anton slightly. Anton realized what was happening, but he found it difficult to respond.
Anton looked up at the man. He was unshaven. Officers needed to shave, to set the example.