“You got that right. I heard they blew up a fuel depot yesterday. Killed a couple of guys in the process. You know how the rumor mill goes — I hear there are Krauts dressed as Americans trying to cause all kinds of trouble.”
“If you see any, you let me know.”
“Ain’t you funny, buddy. You sound like you could be a German yourself. Are you from Pennsylvania? You know, Pennsylvania Dutch.”
“Philadelphia.” Klein didn’t know what Pennsylvania Dutch meant, but he knew Philadelphia was in Pennsylvania.
“I used to go into Philly to shop at the Macy’s,” the soldier said. “You know the big one near City Hall?”
“Macy’s. Of course.” Klein smiled tentatively. “I buy all my ties there.”
The soldier chatting with him came to a dead stop. He raised his M1 so that it was — almost — pointing at Klein.
“What the hell are you doing?” Klein stood. His hands crept toward the knife tucked into his belt, at the small of his back.
“Hey fellas,” the soldier said. “This guy here says he’s from Philly but he don’t know Wanamaker’s from Macy’s. You think he’s one of those German agents?”
The others stopped and circled Klein in a loose ring. They held their rifles so that they would be ready in an instant.
Klein said nervously, “You have the wrong guy.”
“Ask him what the capital of Pennsylvania is,” somebody said.
The soldier looked at him. “You heard the man. Well?”
“Philadelphia,” he said, grinning, as if the answer was obvious.
“No, buddy. Try Harrisburg.”
Somebody else fired another question at him. “Maybe he ain’t much on geography. How about the movies. So tell me, buddy, the name of the movie that won Best Picture last year?”
What? He had trained for hand-to-hand combat and for rigging explosives, not for trivia questions. He said the first title that came to mind. If it was that famous, it must have won the award. “Gone with the Wind,” he said.
But even as he said it, Klein knew from the look on the soldier’s face that the answer was wrong. His fingers searched for his knife. With luck, he might be able to cut his way free. His fingers groped frantically. Where was his knife?
“Looking for this?” a soldier asked, holding the knife in front of him. The American had been quicker than him.
Klein’s brain scrambled for just the right thing to say, but he was confused. German and English words vied for attention.
Too late. He saw that the first soldier’s rifle was now pointed directly at him. No amount of fast talking was going to get him out of this hot water.
“Hands up,” the soldier said. “It looks like we found us one of those back-stabbing Nazi saboteurs.”
Lieutenant Mulholland was called to a briefing before the attack on Kampfgruppe Friel. It was Mulholland who had enlightened the colonel that they were facing a column of SS troops.
"That figures," said the colonel, whose name was Akers. "If they were Wehrmacht, they would have had the good sense to surrender. Now, we'll have to kill every last one of the bastards."
"There's something else you should know, sir. These are the same bastards who murdered our men at the Malmedy crossroads," Mulholland said. "Shot them down in cold blood."
That caused a stir among the gathering of officers. The colonel finally waved them to silence with the stub of his unlit cigar. "All right, all right. If we're going to be shooting fish in a barrel, the fish may as well be piranhas."
The American attack would be head on. It would not be an assault so much as a bombardment. The Germans had their backs to the river with no way to cross, now that all the bridges had been blown. The American force surrounded them in a loose semi-circle, putting the lid on the pot.
For the Germans, the only choice would be surrender — or annihilation. Of course, the Germans were far from finished. Kampfgruppe Friel still had close to a thousand veteran SS troops and several dozen tanks, along with other artillery. Already, they were dug into the village, with panzers wedged between stone buildings and machine gunners burrowed down between thick stone walls.
When Mulholland asked for orders, the colonel waved his cigar again. He had a lot more to worry about than deploying a few snipers. He had absorbed the ragtag force that the snipers had joined on the road into his own unit, but he told Mulholland to deploy as he saw fit in support of the attack.
"You know more about it than I do, Lieutenant," the commander said. "You just pick off as many of those SS bastards as you can."
"Yes, sir."
Returning to his men, Mulholland decided that a team approach would be best. That way, if there was a need to concentrate their fire, they could work together to do that.
"Listen up, I want Cole and Vaccaro on my left," he said, coming back from the briefing. He handed the young soldier a powerful pair of binoculars. "Kid, you will act as my spotter. I want you to keep those glasses on the Krauts. We are looking for any way, shape, or form to take out their machine gun nests or any gun emplacements they have set up." He looked at Jolie. "I don't suppose there's any convincing you to keep out of the fighting? It looks to me like that girl could use some help up at the field hospital."
"These Germans want to get back into France," she said. "How can I let them?"
"They had their chance to get to France," Mulholland said. "The only place they're going now is to hell. You ought to let us handle it."
Jolie lifted her chin defiantly. Even after living rough in the field, hiking through snow and sleeping in trucks, she still managed to look like a dish. "You cannot tell me what to do."
Mulholland sighed. After six months of fighting his way across Europe, there was still a lot of Boy Scout in him that didn't want to see a woman in combat. But seeing that face, Mulholland felt his resolve melt. "You do want you want, Jolie. I know you will, anyhow. But do me a favor and don't let the colonel see you, or it's my derrière."
They spread out behind a stone wall, their position anchored on the left by a butcher shop and on the right by the bulk of the old church that had been converted into a field hospital.
No sooner had they moved into position than the American guns opened up. The German guns replied. The battle of La Gleize had begun.
CHAPTER 26
Time to hunt.
Cole let his shooter’s calm settle over him, although it was hardly quiet on the battlefield. The heavy guns on both sides barked at one another like big dogs. Shells from tanks and tank destroyers hurtled back and forth, blasting both La Gleize and the woods beyond the American lines to rubble and splinters.
He wasn't worried about that. The only gun that mattered to him was the one in his hands. Between the gouges in the stock and the scratches on the barrel, the Springfield taken from McNulty was showing signs of hard use. The rifle must have been used when it was issued to McNulty in the first place. But it shot as true as ever. Cole had cleaned and oiled every inch of it — there was no machinery better cared for anywhere in La Gleize.
The snipers were scattered among the ruins of the little village on the fringes of La Gleize. The American tanks and tank destroyers were located further back. Most of the artillery being traded screamed overhead. From time to time, the Germans raked the village with machine gun fire, but most of their attention was on the encircling American lines on the higher ground.
Lieutenant Mulholland saw this as their opportunity to show the value of snipers on the battlefield.