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The appearance of the small village of Gunthers startled Browning. He had driven through it legs than thirty hours before. It had been tidy, neat and spotless; the houses with their steeply pitched roofs smartly painted, their verandahs and windows decked with carefully tended boxes of bright scarlet geraniums and ferns. The men had been hurrying about their business with the usual Teutonic dedication, as though their ignoring the increasing tension so close to their homes would encourage it to go away. The women had been at the shops, the children in school. Browning had slowed his vehicle to watch a group of boys, supervised by a tracksuited teacher, playing soccer. Browning didn’t understand the rules too well, but it was increasing in popularity back home in the States, and it looked active enough to be interesting. Now, it was all an area of terrible desolation and smoke-blackened wreckage. Not a single building was left standing above its first level. They were a thousand meters to the east of it.

Hal Ginsborough said quietly, ‘Will you take a look at that! God almighty!’

‘Mother-fuckers…’ It was Podini.

‘Shut up,’ snapped Browning. Who needed comments to emphasize the civilian horror? He couldn’t see a living soul in the wreckage, though doubtless there’d be some. Somebody always survived, no matter how bad it looked; he’d seen it happen many times in Nam, but it was always hard to believe. Maybe some of the villagers would have left before the battle began, but he doubted if all would have quit their homes. Some did… but many didn’t. They sat in the cellars and waited, praying desperately that the war would pass them by. He knew what the wreckage of the buildings would smell like; it would be worse in a few days. Someone, perhaps him, would eventually have to help dig out the bodies, hoping all the time they might find someone alive, some kid perhaps, protected by a beam of timber, a collapsed wall. The smell… the stink, and the flies. There would be rats… Jesus, why was it so many of them seemed to escape destruction? Lean, starving dogs; worse, cats that could sometimes look obscenely well-fed, licking themselves clean amongst the tumbled and bloodstained rubble! There were fires in the wreckage, and a heavy layer of smoke drifted above the remains of the village like a shroud.

The lieutenant’s voice was on the troop net again: ‘Best speed, Indians, but maintain your formation. Good luck, guys.’

Best speed! ‘Step on it, Mike,’ he ordered, and felt the Abrams surge forward, bucking over the uneven ground, as the roar of the engines increased. Sound was always relative to discomfort in a tank, he thought wryly. The only good thing was you didn’t hear most of the noises of battle. It was still there, though; not far in front of him now. Five thousand meters… closer. Much closer!

He saw the explosion of a shell two hundred meters ahead. It looked like an error, or an optimistic ranging attempt by some distant gun crew. Mike Adams had seen it too, and he steered the Abrams in a series of sharp but uneven zigzags that shook Browning’s head from side to side as the direction continuously changed; a few hundred meters of driving like this and he would begin to feel travel sick.

It was barely possible to distinguish the riverbank several hundred meters to their right. Like everywhere else the ground seemed to be on fire, the grass and trees smoking, hazy; wreckage, twisted and spewing Mack fumes. Far ahead were the remains of a small wood on a low hill, and a few scattered and blasted farm buildings at the foot of the rising ground.

The barrage began to increase in intensity. Where the hell was the American smoke, Browning wondered? It was madness charging straight into enemy guns; the only protection they were getting was from the smoke of the Soviet shell explosions. The horizon was blurred, but the advancing American tanks must be obvious targets to the enemy gunners. Browning couldn’t pinpoint their positions, but had the ghastly feeling he was being driven into the heart of a maelstrom of artillery fire.

Two heavy calibre shells bracketed the tank, forcing Adams to correct the steering. Hell seemed to open its doors ahead of them; shell-bursts as dense as forest trees were columns of fire leaping up from the ground. Was the squadron getting air support? Browning thought he caught a glimpse of a line of gunships above him. If it were imagination, it helped a little; he had lost sight of the other tanks. He was experiencing a growing sense of indecisiveness and terror. Should he order Adams to slow down… increase his speed? Should he tell him to swing the Abrams out of line, try to get away to the side where the barrage might be lighter? Get the hell out of here… that was important… chances of survival were nil… it was only a matter of time… seconds… and they’d be hit… this was crazy… madness…

The lieutenant was shouting on the troop net, static punctuating his words. ‘Indians engaging… Indians engaging…’

Adams swerved the XM1 again as the burning hulk of a Russian T-80 loomed through the smoke. Someone, something, had hit it… visibility was little more than forty meters. The corpses of a Soviet mortar team were strewn across the path of the Abrams, their bodies blackened and twisted by napalm, still smouldering. The XM1’s tracks churned them into the filthy earth.

Infantry. They would be around somewhere, hidden, waiting, as deadly as howitzers with their anti-tank rocket launchers. Was the barrage easing? Browning sprayed the area ahead with his machine gun… keep the bastards’ heads down. Ginsborough was doing the same… and experiencing identical fears. Browning knew Podini would be seeking targets for the main gun, but there seemed to be none. There was a Soviet BTR-60 personnel carrier to the Abrams’ right, but its wheels had been blown off and its tyres were burning. He saw movement beside the hulk and swung the .50 towards it, firing before he aimed, a line of heavy bullets ripping a deep seam across the ground. He concentrated a long burst on the rear of the carrier and saw green-suited figures stagger and fall. Ginsborough’s 7.62 was chattering… short regular bursts that seemed to be timed to the pulse in Browning’s temples.

Adams was yelling in the intercom: ‘Jesus… oh Jesus… Jesus Christ… Jesus Christ!’ He wound the Abrams through a field of craters, the wreckage of vehicles and men, its speed little more than jogging pace. The smoke was thinning, visibility increasing.

There was a heavy blow on the side of the XM1’s turret which sent a violent shockwave through the fighting compartment and rang the metal of the hull as though it were a vast bell.

‘Shit!’ Ginsborough was swearing. In the gloom of the interior the side of the turret was glowing dull red where an armour-piercing shell had failed to penetrate as it glanced off the thick steel. The ground was rising more sharply, smashed woodland lay ahead, stumps of distorted trees, pitted earth, gaunt roots. A thin hedge ran diagonally across the landscape to the left, partly destroyed, the bushes torn and scattered. Browning saw another group of Soviet infantry eighty meters in front of the Abrams. There were the sounds of light machine gun rounds against the hull, pattering like hail on a barn roof and ho more effective. He brought the Abrams’ Bushmaster Cannon on to the target by remote control, but before he could depress the firing button the Abrams’ M68 gun roared and the infantrymen were lost in the burst of the 105mm shell only fifty meters ahead.

Browning was angry. ‘Save your ammo, Podini… leave the infantry to me.’

‘What infantry?’ Podini sounded exasperated.

The Abrams had reached the rubble of a low wail where the main gun’s shell had exploded. The tracks were grinding harshly, the hull bucking. A couple of meters to the right of the bodies of the Soviet infantrymen were the twisted remains of an ASU-57, its light alloy armour ripped and torn by the blast, its gun barrel buckled. ‘Sorry, Podini… nice work.’