Three thousand meters from here to the village, and the Russian armour is probably skirting the place now. That means we should see something of them pretty soon. Christ, not again! Davis’s head was throbbing; it was the continuous noise, a never-ending reminder of death. He saw some of the infantrymen double across the edge of a field sixty meters to his left, heading for the cover of the nearest buildings; an APC lurched its way past him on the right, followed by two of Alpha Troop’s Chiefiains, one belching heavy smoke from its exhausts. Its driver would be sweating keeping it running, praying he would be allowed to drive it back out of the line, to one of the rear servicing units.
Davis was staring so hard in the direction of the enemy that when he momentarily closed his eyes he could still see the same scene imprinted on his retina like the negative of a photograph. Nothing but the flames of the village, and the drifting flares overhead, moved now.
‘The sods aren’t coming…’ Inkester’s voice made the comment sound like a wish. The lad was tired, exhausted, Davis knew. Christ, how much did they expect you to give? Almost two days of continuous fighting… two days of willing your mind to concentrate, ignoring the discomfort, the stinking heat of the fighting compartment, the cramp that wrenched at your muscles. ‘Come on… come on…’ It wasn’t bravado, Inkester was as nervous as all of them, but he wanted to get it over with… defend this village and then leapfrog back to the brief rest somewhere to the rear; the next village, river or wood.
Davis had sometimes prayed, but he had never been convinced by religion; he was even ashamed that during the past hours he had resorted to praying to a God in whom he did not believe. But consoled himself with the excuse that you tried everything at times like these. It was no worse than being an atheist all your life, and then demanding absolution a few minutes before you died, just to be on the safe side. It was human nature. And what if I was wrong, though, thought Davis. Christ, it would make you feel bloody stupid if you were killed, and suddenly opened your eyes to find yourself in a far better place… all peaceful, bids singing, warm sunlight, flowers… someone standing there with a cool pint of bitter in their hands. You’d think, Jesus, I’ve been shit scared for days, for no reason. It’s great here, wherever I am. Maybe there’d be a long warm beach, shallow water where the kids could play safely, where you could strip off and just lie in the edge of the sea with the waves lapping along your body, a bit of soft music somewhere in the background, a cool-drinks bar a few meters up the sand behind you, sort of Pacific island scenery.
They said you never heard the shot that killed you; Davis heard the rocket salvo for a fraction of a second before the massive explosion… the roar of their propellants drowning out every other sound, destroying thought and reason. A salvo from thirteen Soviet BM-21 multi-rocket launchers; five hundred and twenty rockets fired together and landing on Charlie Squadron’s positions, betrayed by infra-red location equipment in a Soviet robot observation helicopter hovering four kilometers behind the Russian side of the front-line.
The immense blast totally surrounded Davis’s Chieftain, and though it was fully closed-down the hull transmitted the shockwave like a hammer Mow through the air of the fighting compartment, dazing and numbing the crew. There was a shrill whistling in Davis’s ears… sharp pains shooting through his head. Debris and rubble clattered against the tank’s hull. Davis could hear his men shouting, distantly, their voices thin, feeble, confused.
‘Shut up… all of you shut up…’ It hurt him to speak, his chest felt as if it had been crushed, every rib fractured, his lungs raw. ‘Everybody okay… DeeJay? Inkester? Spink?’ It could happen again, at any moment. What was it? A full missile salvo of some sort. God knows how many have landed. ‘DeeJay, is the engine okay?’ He couldn’t hear it running. ‘Can you see down there?’
‘Fuck all, sir!’
‘What the hell was that? Inkester’s questioning voice was tremulous. ‘Christ I’ve got no vision…’
The smoke was hanging over the ground drifting only slowly in the light breeze, heavy, sinister. Miraculously the episcopes were undamaged, but condensation in the lenses made the smoke appear denser. He wiped the glass with his beret. The haze was thinning a little but it seemed an eternity before Davis was able to see more than a short distance. The flares, the bloody flares were making it worse; turning the mist opaque, like fog in car headlights.
‘Shark, this is Bravo One, over.’ Only silence on the net. ‘Shark, this is Bravo One, over…’ Where the hell was Captain Willis? ‘Shark, this is Bravo One, over.’ No response, not a sound on the squadron network, only the crackle of atmospherics and the low oscillation of a jamming attempt. ‘Charlie Bravo Three, this is Bravo One, over.’ Nothing! God! Check the tuning…’ All stations Charlie, this is Charlie Bravo One, over.’ Bloody dead air… everywhere!
Battle group? He was beginning to feel desperate, isolated. ‘Quebec this is Charlie Bravo One… over.’
There was an instant response that made Davis weak with relief. ‘Charlie Bravo One, this is Quebec!
‘Charlie Bravo One… we have lost squadron and troop contact.’
‘Roger Charlie Bravo One… the same situation applies here.’
‘We’ve just taken a time-on-target on the squadron position.’
There was a moment’s silence that made Davis wonder if he should repeat the last part of the message, then: ‘Do you have visual contact?’
‘No visual contact.’
‘Roger Charlie Bravo One. Rendezvous Orchid. Tiber open Causeway!
‘Wilco, Quebec. Out.’
Davis checked through the code… Orchid was Rüper… Causeway, Braunschweig; he knew Tiber was bridge. He could still use the bridge at Braunschweig, but where was Rüper? He switched on the lights and studied the map… the page appeared almost white, and the aching in his head made it difficult to focus his eyes. Rüper… God, it was ten kilometers west of North Braunschweig. What the hell was happening along the front? They had told him to pull back twenty-five kilometers. Maybe they were resting him? God, that would be a relief. ‘DeeJay… can you see yet?’
‘Yeah, reasonably, sir.’
‘Then get us out… and go easy, Christ knows what the ground is like.’
The Chieftain slewed, then straightened as DeeJay corrected the steering and accelerated. It was comforting to feel the movement of the tank once more. The Russian armour must be close now, thought Davis nervously. Maybe only meters away through the smoke. Their infantry would be on foot between the villages, they would keep their BMPs a bit further back until the ground opened up again. Infantry. What the hell had happened to the NATO troops? He had seen nothing of them since the rockets had landed… poor bastards, they didn’t stand a chance… they would be lying amongst the rubble, the lucky ones already dead, the others dying.
Dying. Death. What had happened to the others; all the tanks of Charlie Squadron? There had been nine of them. Surely Bravo One wasn’t the only one remaining in action? It wasn’t possible. Hopefully he tried the radio nets again, but there were no replies. He stared out through the vision blocks but could see only rubble which held even darker wells of mist in its shadows. DeeJay swerved the Chieftain, a hulk of twisted wreckage barely recognizable as a tank lay tilted in a crater; black fumes wreathed over Bravo One’s hull as they passed. Had Davis seen bodies? He wasn’t certain… men weren’t always easy to recognize when they were killed violently. He hadn’t even been able to identify the vehicle; it was another Chieftain, that was all he knew.