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Barkmann was still groggy, but back on his feet, nodding to a man here and there, slapping a shoulder, or inspecting a small wound as he went from man to man.

Baker Company had been knocked about but was still in fighting shape.

Able had been hurt the most.

Williams, in receipt of Greiner’s orders, quickly organised some lightly wounded Rangers to look after the prisoners, shoehorning a number of Able survivors into Baker Company, and finally creating an extra reserve force for the battalion headquarters.

The Ranger commander had selected the small hill as a convenient place to hold an orders group, and as he waited for the officers to arrive, he sorted out the tactical orders from Brigade into orders that he could pass to his men.

Nearby, a pair of medics loaded a bloodied Russian officer onto a stretcher and headed off towards a small hut near the river, where the enemy wounded were being collected.

The man was crying.

Not tears of pain, but tears of frustration. Burastov had failed in his mission, and the 424th had been cornered and destroyed.

Williams did not spare the wounded Russian a second thought, concentrating on his planning.

Acknowledging Barkmann’s presence, Williams spoke quietly with the young officer now commanding Baker Company and drew him into the next stage of the Ranger’s war. Running his pencil over the map work, Williams was pleased to see that Barkmann seemed up to the task ahead. Sending the Ranger to grab some coffee, Williams moved to his table, a pile of ammo boxes, and starting making notes on the margins, before his concentration was interrupted by firing from the village.

0651 hrs, Monday, 2nd December 1945, the waste ground, Rue Principale, Hattmatt, Alsace.

In Hattmatt, the survivors of the 424th, both wounded and unwounded, were herded onto a piece of ground to the south of the Rue Principale.

Din constantly spat blood as he assisted a wounded comrade into the holding area.

He had been felled in the close quarter fight; an enemy soldier had rushed him and slammed his helmeted head into his face at speed.

The resultant broken nose was painful and his eyes resembled those of a Panda as the bruising spread across his face. His lips were shredded by the impact and he had no front teeth worth a damn.

Din found a small mound and carefully propped the wounded soldier against it, leaving him to the care of others as he moved amongst his men, acknowledging their efforts, and encouraging them to hold their heads high.

He did not immediately notice the demeanour of the US troops, but when he did, he understood completely.

He pushed his way to the edge of the mass of men, directly opposite what was clearly the man in charge.

Hindered by his facial injuries, Din tried to remonstrate, but his English was insufficient for the task, as was the understanding of the American Captain; not that his understanding of Din’s entreaties would have made the slightest difference. After all, he had orders from the General himself.

The Soviet soldiers began, one by one, to understand what their officer was shouting about and their agitation grew.

Most stood and faced what was about to happen, resolved to their fate.

Some saw matters differently.

Din gave the American officer a look of total hatred and watched as the man’s attention was drawn elsewhere, a surge by a few prisoners trying to give themselves some chance of survival.

Shouts were followed by shots as the Armored Infantry shot the rushers down, the volume of fire growing as they turned their attention to the mass of prisoners on the waste ground.

Din screamed, holding up his hands, first to the firing Americans, then turning and trying to calm his men.

A heavy machine gun joined the slaughter, then another, and then there were four such weapons, pouring bullets into the helpless men.

A single bullet clipped Din’s thigh, its passage and the resultant pain bringing a strange moment of peace to the condemned man.

He turned for the final time, facing his enemy, hawking and spitting a huge gobbet of bloody phlegm at the criminals who were killing his men, particularly at the man who commanded the slaughter.

Din launched himself forward, intent on killing the bastard with his bare hands.

“What the fuck is that?”

No one could supply Williams with the answer or, at least, no one could state for sure what it was, although most suspected the origins of and reasons for the firing.

“Lukas, get a squad down there pronto and find out what the fuck’s goin’ on.”

Barkmann sent his Senior NCO and a squad from Baker Company off to investigate.

On their return, First Sergeant Ford gave a short but sober report on events near the Rue Principale.

The orders group concluded, Williams dismissed his officers and found himself alone.

He gazed off towards Hattmatt, towards an imagined spot containing nearly two hundred slaughtered Red Army soldiers, and he prayed.

‘Eternal rest grant unto them, O Lord, and let perpetual light shine upon them. May the souls of the faithful departed, through the mercy of god, rest in peace. Amen.’

2nd December 1945, Hattmatt; the aftermath.

Rumours of the massacre spread through the 16th like wildfire, subsequently making their way through the Legion Corps, and all the way to the ears of De Lattre himself.

Pierce ordered the arrest of the officer responsible for the shootings, but the 18th’s Captain was quickly released.

Greiner;s orders came under close scrutiny.

To Williams and the Rangers, the orders had been simple enough to understand.

To the 18th’s Captain Pallister, catapulted into command by the loss of a number of higher ranks, and clearly suffering from the pressure that was bound to build upon a relatively inexperienced man under those circumstances, they were also simple to understand.

His interpretation of the order to swiftly manage the prisoners within a ten minute time scale meant only one thing.

In the end, the whole matter was glossed over and ignored, even omitted from some of the biographies that appeared post-war, although Greiner’s orders were subsequently criticised for being imprecise and open to interpretation.

Whatever the cause, whatever the reason, wherever blame was to be laid, Hattmatt is accepted as the first of a chain of events that has now entered into history as one of the most unsavoury and brutal episodes in the chronicles of warfare.

Chapter 112 – THE KILLINGS

If we are ever in doubt about what to do, it is a good rule to ask ourselves what we shall wish on the morrow that we had done.

John Lubbock
1127 hrs, Wednesday, 4th December 1945, outside of the Mairie, Rue Principale, Mittelschaeffolsheim, Alsace.

The advance of the Legion Corps had, so far, been slow and bloody. Alma had suffered a reverse at Wingersheim, when a Soviet counter-attack caused a temporary withdrawal. It had been a difficult call for St.Clair, but Lavalle saw an opportunity in the manoeuvre and approved the decision.

The Soviets, eager to show the hated SS their metal, over-extended themselves, and Alma turned on them in terminal fashion.

Knocke reoriented the Normandie Group just in time to stop a drive into his northern flank, with part of Uhlmann’s tank unit arriving perfectly on the flank of the advancing Soviet units, and putting the survivors to flight.

There was a time implication for the Allied attack, but the destruction of a whole Soviet brigade was a bonus, especially when the whole point of the plan was to draw down Red Army reserve units, pulling them away from the main thrust to the north.

The slow advance of the Legion had already persuaded Eisenhower to check the main attack and, back in Versailles, the SHAEF commander watched the developments in Alsace, waiting and judging his moment.