‘I’m not risking three tanks to rescue four men, Private. They’ll have to fight where they are.’
‘You said so, Dima.’ Sasha addressed Dimitri now. ‘You said a Cossack will die for someone in his clan.’
Dimitri grinned at Sasha, even through his mounting fatigue. The
‘Yes. I did say that.’
Pasha piped up from his loader’s position. ‘They’re in our clan, Sergeant. They’re tankers, aren’t they?’
‘Yes,’ Dimitri answered before his Soviet son could.
‘And we’re the Cossacks,’ Sasha implored.
We’re the special ones, Sasha was saying. This freckled boy understood.
Dimitri spoke up. His voice shook with the effort in his hands maneuvering the tank. He’d brought them halfway back to their lines.
‘Valya. We vote to go back.’
Valentin spluttered in Dimitri’s earphones. ‘You… you don’t vote! I said no.’
Dimitri whipped the tank to the right, to circle back down the hill.
Sasha held on while the tank jolted, shaking a skinny, childish fist at Dimitri in approval. Dimitri aimed the T- 34 down the hill, grabbed the gear knob to shift into third, then froze. The blunt barrel of a pistol appeared beside him, in Valentin’s hand.
Dimitri gazed at the gun. He thought, Well, let’s see if the little shit is man enough to make it stick.
He flung the gearshift into third. The
‘Yes, Valya, I see it! It’s a lovely pistol, but I don’t think we’re going to need it just yet. Put it away and get your big gun ready!’
The pistol hung in front of Dimitri’s face for another second, then withdrew. Dimitri shook his head in a small, rueful rattle at the shame of this.
The tank lumbered into the air, bounding off the lip of a crater, then crashed down and kept running. Everyone jarred. Dimitri knocked his padded head and wondered if this constant banging of his noggin was going to make him silly one day when he got old. He balled a fist, hollered,
‘Faster,
waiting tanks, in his son’s mean cowardice, in the sky with its stinking Stukas. And Dima Berko was alive in the middle of all of it, shaking his fist and howling.
‘Are the other three still with us?’ Pasha asked.
Dimitri didn’t know. He had to keep his eyes forward to get back down to the river and the barn. Valentin was the squad leader, and
‘Yes,’ Valentin answered. ‘All three.’ Reluctance stained his voice.
Dimitri considered: His son was no coward. No, the boy was a Communist.
Three tanks for three men. Valya was right - it was a rotten risk - and he was so wrong.
Two hundred meters away, smoke curled from both sides of the river.
The burning Mark IVs were in full flaming bloom, their fuel and ammo had been set off. Gray trails billowed from the engine compartment of the third tank but it was rolling. The fourth patrolled back and forth along the riverbank. To the right of the barn, Medvedenko’s T-34 was ruined, its left-hand tread shot off and lying in pieces behind it. The tank smoldered, black smoke boiled out of the open hatches. One of the remaining Mark IVs had put another round into the Red tank to be certain it would not be rescued and repaired later. Dimitri drew closer. At one hundred meters, flinging the
‘They’ve got wounded,’ Dimitri called into the intercom.
A burst of small-arms fire from across the river tattooed the glacis plate around his hatch door,
‘Go.’
The boy did not hesitate. He reached down between his legs and yanked the handle to the escape hatch. The door lifted and the thin lad slithered out between the treads, then pulled shut the hatch. Close by the
One of the T-34s pulled ahead of the
Something across the river took the hit, Dimitri heard a terrific metal din.
‘They’re on,’ Valya yelled. ‘Go! Get out of here!’
Dimitri floored the gas. Kolyakin’s T-34 in front of him began to roll out of his way. Then, with a wrenching
