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"One thing I haven't done yet is shoot a man taking a leak," Vaccaro said. "What about you?"

"Hell, that's the best time to shoot a Kraut," Cole said. "Even better is if you can shoot one takin' a shit. Or just havin' hisself a smoke. It makes 'em feel like they ain't safe no matter what. Besides, I'd rather shoot a man who had his pecker in his hands than his rifle. It makes it hard for him to shoot back."

"Hell, Cole, once you've got a Kraut in your sights, he's not gonna have a chance to shoot back, no matter what he’s doing." Vaccaro looked down. "I don't want to brag, but that snow sure is cold."

"If I was braggin', I'd tell you how that snow sure is deep."

Vaccaro looked over at Cole and thought that they could almost be friends. Almost. Cole always managed to put a fence around himself to keep others out. There was also something about Cole that was off the rails and unpredictable. He was bat shit crazy and stone cold deliberate all at once. He was like one of those Old West gunfighters in a movie — the one wearing a black hat. The truth was that Cole scared him more than a little. Sure, he could take a joke now and then, but deep down, Cole was hard like some Brooklyn mobster. An enforcer. A hit man. Where his soul should be there was a black lump of mountain coal — or maybe even a copper-jacketed bullet.

He hadn’t been joking when he told the Kid that he was glad Cole was on their side.

Vaccaro was sometimes amazed that the war had lifted someone like Cole out of the woods and mountains of his boyhood and thrown him together with someone like himself. In another time and place, they never would have met. They were opposites, as different as chianti and moonshine, and yet they were alike in some ways. While Cole was a backwoods boy, Vaccaro was from the mean streets of a working class Italian neighborhood in Brooklyn. You had to be tough to survive. Was that so very different from the mountains?

They heard a noise behind them, and looked over their shoulders to see Jolie coming up the ladder.

"Well, this is embarrassing," Vaccaro said.

"Do not worry, I will not look at your willy," she said. "I have left my magnifying glass downstairs, anyway."

"Ha, ha. These French girls are ruthless."

"Hell, piss on 'em if they can't take a joke." Cole shook himself and buttoned up his trousers. "Let's see if we can get the ghost to show hisself today."

They climbed down to the first floor of the barn, where the others were preparing to head out. The morning was achingly cold, but it felt good to be up and moving. The movement brought warmth to their stiff limbs.

Cole scanned the scenery once more and saw only white, dull grays and browns. The sun was up, but hidden by the deep cloud cover, it barely did more than give the forest a dusky light.

“Listen up,” Lieutenant Mulholland said. Although the squad was hardly bigger than a Boy Scout patrol, he always managed to sound as if we were addressing a briefing of Division commanders. “We have one objective today, and that’s to go after the Krauts.”

“Objective?” Vaccaro spoke up. “Isn’t that something they say in the courtroom, sir?”

“That’s objection,” Mulholland said, realizing a second too late that Vaccaro was yanking his chain. “All right, wise guy, you can take point.”

“Aw, and here I thought it wasn’t my turn to get shot today.”

“Shut up, Vaccaro.” The lieutenant turned to Jolie. “You don’t have to come with us, you know. I don’t know what we’re walking into but there’s a good chance you’ll be safe if you stay here.”

“I am coming with you,” Jolie said. “Give me a gun.”

Lieutenant Mulholland opened his mouth to argue, but then thought better of it. Instead, he gave her his sidearm, a Browning 1911 .45 that would definitely put a fat hole in a German.

“Good?”

“C’est bon.”

McNulty spoke up. He had been unusually quiet this morning, which was understandable. He and Rowe had been close, considering that they had both been newcomers to the squad. “Sir? The Kid and I was just thinking that nobody knows we’re here. Out here, I mean. Nobody at HQ, that’s for sure. We could lay low and sit this one out. There’s enough wood—”

The lieutenant cut him off with a shake of his head. He looked at the Kid. “Is that how you feel, son?”

“Sir, it was just talk, is all.”

Mulholland looked at the faces around him. “Listen up, everyone. We are a sniper squad. Which means we operate independently. You all ought to know that by now. We are going to do what snipers do. We are going after the enemy, with or without reinforcements. Any questions, McNulty?”

“No, sir.”

“Then let’s move out,” Mulholland said.

• • •

Still reeling from the news of the massive German attack, General Eisenhower had called a gathering of his top generals in Verdun on December 19. With Christmas a few days ahead, planning a defensive battle was not what anyone had in mind as a way to celebrate the holiday. But Hitler had ruined their plans.

In fact, he seemed intent on stealing victory from the Allies. His massive surge of men and tanks had taken the Americans completely by surprise.

“We are getting reports of tanks and even Luftwaffe planes. What I want to know is, where did all this stuff come from?” Eisenhower asked his staff.

“Out of Hitler’s asshole, most likely,” said General George S. Patton.

Leave it to Patton to put it crudely. Eisenhower didn’t care for Patton’s choice of words, but silently he agreed it was about as good a source as any, at least where Hitler was concerned. No one had thought the Germans capable of this kind of surge. They were supposed to be on the ropes. Broken. Yet they had somehow staged this counterattack in complete secrecy, much as the Allies had done in planning the D-Day invasion. Now, it was their turn to be surprised, and Eisenhower didn’t like it one bit. Being Supreme Allied Commander meant being under constant scrutiny, and the surprise attack made him seem unprepared.

He took a gulp of coffee, then a drag on his cigarette.

At first, no one had wanted to believe the scope and scale of the attack, hoping that it was only a feint. The reports coming back from the Ardennes region soon crushed that hope. The Germans were attacking in force. The question was, how to stop them? That was the job of the men in the room.

There was Omar Bradley, a calm and even-keeled presence — at least as far as battlefield generals went. General Jacob Devers was there, and so was British General Sir Arthur Tedder, who served as Eisenhower’s deputy.

And Patton was there, of course. He was the best-dressed officer in the room, with a polished steel helmet and ivory-handled pistols. Somehow, he managed to wear more general’s stars than all the other generals in the room put together.

Patton came from old money and felt quite at home on the world stage. He also knew tactics, having learned them first-hand as a boy from none other than John Singleton Mosby, the Gray Ghost of the Confederacy, who had been a friend of Patton’s grandfather. The old soldiers used to take the boy riding with them, and some of Mosby’s boldness had worn off on the impressionable boy. But where Mosby had been sly like a fox, Patton was more like a charging bull.

He was also Ike’s most problematic general. In fact, Ike had almost been forced to sack him when Patton started slapping shell-shocked soldiers and berating them as cowards. Eisenhower had tried to sweep the incidents under the rug, but the press had caught wind of it. Anyone who had been in combat in this war knew well enough that those soldiers were not cowards. They had simply had all that they could take.

Back home, Americans did not take kindly to the news. These suffering boys could be their sons and brothers Patton was slapping around. Who did he think he was, anyhow?