The shudder of the powerful artillery bursts reached through the metalwalls of the vehicle. Suddenly, the armor seemed hopelessly thin, thetracks too weak to hold, and the automatic cannon little more than a toy.
Occasionally, a tinny sprinkling of debris struck the vehicle, faintlyaudible through Plinnikov's headset and over the engine whine. He couldfeel the engine pulling, straining to move the tracks through the mud ofthe farm trail.
"Comrade Lieutenant, we're very close to the barrage," his driver toldhim.
Plinnikov understood that the driver meant
"Keep moving," Plinnikov commanded, "just keep moving. Headstraight through the smoke."
56
RED ARMY
The driver obeyed, but Plinnikov could feel his unwillingness through the metal frame that separated them. For a moment, Plinnikov took his eyes away from the periscope and looked to the side, checking on his gunner. But Belonov was all right, eyes locked to his own periscope.
Three men in a rolling steel box. There was no margin of safety in personnel now; everyone had to do his job without fail. Plinnikov had never received the additional soldiers required to fill out his reconnaissance platoon for war, and he had no extra meat, no dismount strength in his own vehicle. As it was, he could barely man the essential positions in each of his three vehicles.
It was impossible to judge the exact location of his vehicle now. If everything was still on track, his second vehicle would be tucked in behind him, with Senior Sergeant Malyarchuk to the rear in an over-watch position. Plinnikov laughed to himself. Overwatch. You couldn't see ten meters. He glanced at his map, anxious to orient himself.
He could feel the trail dropping toward a valley or ravine. Artillery rounds struck immediately to the front.
"Keep going," Plinnikov said. "Get down into the low ground. Stay on the trail as long as the smoke holds.
Plinnikov sensed that they were very close to the enemy. Clots of earth and stone flew into the air, hurtling across his narrowed horizon.
Plinnikov guessed that, if he moved off the trail, there might be mines, but that the trail itself would only be covered by direct fires—which would be ineffective in the confusion of the Soviet artillery preparation.
"Lieutenant, we're catching up with the barrage. We're too close."
"Keep going. We're already in it. Go right through."
"Comrade Lieutenant . . ." It was Junior Sergeant Belonov, his gunner and assistant. The boy's face was milky.
"It's all right," Plinnikov told him through the intercom. "Just spot for targets. If we wait and try to sneak through, they'll get us for sure."
An unidentified object thumped against the vehicle so hard that the vehicle jolted, as though wincing in pain.
"Go
"I can't see the road. I lose it."
"Just
Suddenly, the artillery blasts seemed to swamp them, shaking the vehicle like a boat on rough water. Plinnikov realized that if they threw a track now, they were dead.
57
Ralph Peters
In the thick smoke, the lights of the blasts seemed demonic, alive with deadly intentions.
"More to the left . . .
The tracks seemed to buckle on the edge of a ditch or gully, threatening to peel away from the road wheels.
But the sudden black shape off to their right side was lifeless, its metal deformed by a direct hit. The driver swerved away, and the tracks came level, back on the trail again.
Plinnikov broke out in a sweat. He had not seen the shattered vehicle until they almost collided with it. He wondered, for the first time, if he had not done something irrevocably foolish.