"Can we get going again, Sergeant?" Fritz asked pointedly. A halted panzer was a panzer waiting to stop something.
"Wait a second." Ludwig looked through the TZF4 again. Yes, the Dutch truck was definitely laid up. "Go ahead," he said.
As soon as he gave permission, the panzer seemed to bound forward. The flat Dutch plains made ideal panzer country. But the buildings and trees up ahead made equally ideal places to hide antitank guns. Even if the Dutch had taken a big punch at the start of the fight, they were still in there swinging.
Ludwig felt a tap on the back of his left leg. He ducked down into the turret. "Was ist los?" he asked the radio operator.
"Bridge up ahead," Theo Hossbach answered. "We've got paratroops holding it. The Dutchmen are giving them a hard time."
"I bet they are," Rothe said. They hadn't been ready for soldiers jumping out of Ju-52s and taking bridges and airports away from them. Well, who would have been? Nobody in the last war fought like that. Hell, in the last war even pilots didn't wear parachutes. As far as Ludwig was concerned, that meant everybody who'd got into an airplane during the last war was out of his goddamn mind. The panzer commander brought his mind back to the business at hand. "Up ahead, huh? Which map square?"
"C-9," Theo told him.
"C-9?" Ludwig repeated, and the radioman nodded. Rothe unfolded the map so he could see where he was-or where he thought he was, anyhow. Wrestling with the map inside the cramped turret made him feel like a one-armed paper hanger with the hives. At last, though, he got it open. "Well, Jesus Christ! We're in C-10 now. Tell 'em we're on our way."
"Will do." Theo shouted into the microphone that connected the panzer to the platoon, company, regiment, and division commanders. Everybody could tell Ludwig what to do. Half the time, everybody seemed to be trying to tell him at once. But all German panzers came with radios, so they could work together. That hadn't been true of the Czechs. The Wehrmacht was using captured Czech panzers-the more, the merrier. Before they went into German service, technicians installed radio sets in the machines that lacked them.
Machine-gun bullets clattered off the Panzer II's steel flank. Ludwig did some shouting of his own: to Fritz, through the speaking tube. "Got you, Sergeant!" the driver yelled back. The panzer swung a little south of west.
That damned Dutch machine gun kept banging away. Ludwig wondered why. A Panzer II had less armor than it should have-he'd seen as much. One hit with any kind of cannon shell and you bought yourself a plot. But, by God, the beast did carry enough steel to keep out machine-gun bullets. And every round the silly Dutchmen wasted on the Panzer II was a round they weren't shooting at the foot soldiers they could really hurt.
Most of the time, Rothe would have stuck his head out so he could see what was going on. Right this minute, that looked like a bad idea. Yeah, just a little, he thought with a wry chuckle. He had four vision ports in the turret: two on the left, one on the right, and one at the back. The bullets were spanging off the left side of the turret, so…
There it was! The machine gun's muzzle spat flame from the front of an apple orchard. Ludwig traversed the turret. He fired back at the enemy gun. The Dutch crew manning it had run for cover by the time his weapons bore on it. They'd seen danger coming and got out of there. That meant they'd harass somebody else pretty soon, but he didn't know what he could do about it.
"That's got to be the bridge, Sergeant." Fritz's voice came back through the speaking tube.
"It does?" With the turret swung to the left, Rothe couldn't see much of what the driver was talking about. He brought it back to face straight ahead again. Sure enough, there was a bridge. And the people around it were shooting at the people on it and right by it. The soldiers hanging on to the bridge wore field-gray. The bastards attacking them were in Dutch gray-green. With leaves off the trees and grass going yellow, neither uniform offered a whole hell of a lot of camouflage.
The Dutch soldiers were too busy trying to drive the paratroopers off the bridge so they could blow it to pay much attention to advancing panzers-several other machines had come with Ludwig's. One of them was a great honking Panzer III-a fifteen-and-a-half-tonne monster with two machine guns and a 37mm cannon that could fire a useful high-explosive shell.
It could, and it did. Three or four rounds from that cannon put two Dutch guns out of action. "Gott im Himmel, I wish we had one of those!" Ludwig knew he sounded jealous. He didn't care. He wished the Wehrmacht had more of the big panzers, too. They could do things his lighter machine couldn't-and they could take punishment that would turn the Panzer II into scrap metal…or into a bonfire.
He opened up with his machine gun. The Dutch soldiers scattered. They hadn't looked for an attack from the rear. Well, too damn bad. They also seemed less willing than the Czechs had been to hold in place till they got killed. Say what you would about the Czechs, they had balls.
Three or four He-123s swooped down on the Dutch troops. Next to Ju-87s, the Henschel biplanes looked like last week's-hell, last war's-news. That didn't mean they couldn't do the job. They shot up the Dutchmen and dropped bombs on their heads. The bombs weren't big ones-Ju-87s could carry a lot more-but the Henschels put them right on the money.
Ju-87s had sirens to make them sound even scarier than they were. The He-123s didn't. But, when they dove, they might have been firing God's machine guns. Ludwig had heard that just the right engine RPMs on those babies could make them as demoralizing as all get-out. A lot of what you heard was bullshit. Not this. He forgot who'd told him, but the guy had the straight goods.
He stood up in the turret to get a better look around. A Dutchman fired a couple of wild rifle shots at him. He gunned the enemy soldier down with his MG34. Two more Dutch soldiers dropped their weapons and raised their hands.
Ludwig almost killed them in cold blood. At the last second, he caught himself. He pointed brusquely toward the rear. Keeping their hands high over their heads, they stumbled off into captivity…if they didn't run into some other trigger-happy German soldier before anybody took charge of them.
Not my worry, Rothe thought. He was glad he hadn't squeezed the trigger. They'd fought fair, and so had he. Sometimes, in the heat of battle, you did things you wished you hadn't later. This time, Ludwig didn't-quite.
His panzer stopped at the eastern end of the bridge. A paratrooper waved to him. "Good to see you, by God," the fellow called. "It was getting a little hairy here." His helmet fit his head more closely than the standard Wehrmacht model. He wore a coverall over his tunic, along with rubber knee and elbow pads.
And he wasn't kidding. Several of his buddies lay sprawled or twisted in death. A medic tended to a wounded trooper. Other groaning men waited for whatever he could do for them.
"Can we cross the bridge?" Ludwig asked.
"Ja," the paratrooper answered. "We pulled the wires on the demolition charges before the Dutchmen could set them off. And we've cleared the mines on the roadway and chucked them in the river. I think we got 'em all."
"Thanks a bunch." Ludwig wished the paratrooper hadn't added the last few words. The son of a bitch only laughed at him. He bent down and shouted into the speaking tube: "Take us across, Fritz."
"Will do," the driver said. "What's on the other side?"
"More Dutchmen with guns," Ludwig told him. "What the hell do you expect?"
"How about some gals with big tits?"
"Yeah, how about that?" Rothe said dryly. He wished he had a control that would let him pour ice water on Fritz. The driver was the horniest guy he'd ever run into. The worst part was, he did get laid a lot. Ludwig knew that if he used a no-holds-barred approach like that, all he'd get was his face slapped.