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He wasn’t sure how long he and his men had been waiting in the cold, but it might have been minutes and it might have been hours. They’d stopped their advance when one of the other Sergeants had sat down and refused to move. An Obergrenadier lay next to him, holding his rifle tight against his chest. He keened under his breath and rocked side to side. Behr should know the man’s name, but it had completely escaped him.

Mortars rocketed overhead, seeking the Allied positions. Explosions rocked the ground and should have sent many of his men seeking cover, but instead they snarled like animals.

Sergeant Heinz stood up.

Behr’s head swam again, and he nearly dropped to his knees. He got a hand out and caught himself on a tree branch.

The enemies were scattered ahead, and they had to die.

A squad of soldiers were embedded nearby, putting fire on an enemy position. Behr’s rage grew by the second.

The enemy was ahead and they had to die.

One of the men turned and popped him a quick salute. He was young, barely old enough to shave his skin, but old enough to fight for the Fatherland. Behr was aware that the man was on his side. He was also aware that the child was scared to death. Fresh, hot, pulsing, his blood coursed through his veins as he struggled to hold up an MP40 and fire.

Behr’s eyes filmed over. He suddenly had trouble seeing anything but the red heat signature of the other soldier, but it was enough. He leapt off the ground, soared several meters, and landed on the boy. The young soldier cried out in surprise, and then in anger as Behr ripped out his throat with his bare teeth.

The others in his squad descended on the fighters with malice. Chunks of flesh flew as the men tore into any exposed skin.

Blood stained the snow, but it was all the same to Behr. Red.

Moments later, when the boy no longer moved beneath him, Behr rose to his feet. The slaughtered lay in piles. Fifteen bodies that had once been alive.

Behr needed more.

The enemy was ahead and they HAD TO DIE!

The Sergeant roared with fury toward the front lines.

Behind him, the men that had just been killed struggled to their feet. They rose: a ragged army of bloodstained ghouls that seethed with rage. Eyes that had been many different shades were now white.

The men in his company followed, howling in fury as they ran.

Behr’s force of a single squad grew as they came upon others.

A halftrack had survived the trek into the woods. It crept along at a snail’s pace as it tried to pick out targets in the distance.

Behr and several other men leapt onto the vehicle and fed.

The slaughter went on for hours.

ELEVEN

COLEY

The second wave of Germans fell almost as quickly as the first. Although larger and more intense, the rushing Krauts in their white, interspersed with mottled camouflaged troops, advanced up the hill.

The fog had barely let up as the day wound on, showing only occasional breaks for sunlight. The dugout was cold, and sensing that no change in the weather conditions was coming, Lieutenant Coley dreamed of lighting a fire.

There was enough wood around to get a good blaze going. If they did make a fire, at least they would die warm.

The Germans had held off from a third advance up the hill for several hours. The men milled around behind homes in the village below. Some showed themselves occasionally, but Smith—the company sniper—was on them and had fired at least one successful shot at a Kraut.

Coley moved among his men, reassuring them that he was doing everything he could to get support for them. The twenty men of the 99th Infantry had now been dug in for over six hours, and faced several waves of advancing soldiers.

“What do you think they’re planning?” Tramble asked for the third time.

“I don’t know, and I don’t like it. If I was in charge down there, I’d have men moving in for flanking attacks. I’d also have a tank ready. If they had a Panzer down there they’d have killed us a long time ago.”

“Makes you wonder what the Germans are up to, if they’re attacking without armor support,” Tramble said. “It don’t seem normal.”

Tramble cupped his cigarette to keep the glow hidden from any German snipers. Coley wasn’t the only one with a sharpshooter on hand. The Germans had taken a few potshots from extended range during the day. The perfect place would have been the location his two men had occupied to keep tabs on the situation while the Germans were still arriving.

When the pair had made it back to the emplacement they’d reported running into a Kraut patrol and getting off a few lucky shots before hightailing it back to this defensive position.

“Get a load of this,” Tramble said, and stubbed out his cigarette in the snow.

One of the Germans was approaching the fence with a white flag in hand.

“Hold your fire, men. They probably want to tend to their wounded,” Coley called out.

“What wounded? We killed every Jerry that came up the hill,” Private Owen yelled back.

The man walked up to the fence with his flag held high. Coley didn’t stand up, but yelled to him that they could tend to their wounded.

A half-dozen medics moved out from behind buildings and approached the battlefield.

During the last assault, some of the German soldiers had made it over the barbed wire fence and closed to within thirty yards of Coley’s position before being mowed down. The man who had approached the fence picked his way over the barbed wire gingerly, and moved to a wounded man. He leaned over and checked on the soldier, then helped him down the hill.

“Guess we missed one. Guy was good at playing dead,” Tramble muttered.

Other medics crossed the deadly barricade and tended to fallen comrades.

The man with the white flag moved to within twenty-five yards and got on all fours, looking over a man who’d been shot—or so Coley had thought—through the chest. The German had slumped over and not moved again.

The medic bent over, then got down in the snow and peeled the jacket back from the wounded soldier’s chest. He leaned close, and listened to the injured man.

“I don’t like this, sir,” Tramble said, and moved his aim to cover the medic.

“Hold on. He’s playing by the rules so far,” Coley said.

A pair of artillery shells fell behind the company’s dug in position and exploded, throwing snow and earth into the air.

“Son of a bitch. He’s got a radio,” Tramble said. “I saw it when he turned. He’s calling in our position.”

“Hey, hey!” Coley called to the German. “You using a radio?”

He felt stupid for doing it. For all he knew, the man couldn’t speak a lick of English.

The man continued helping the fallen German soldier and ignored Coley’s calls. When the medic shifted to the side, Coley got a look at a Luger in the Kraut’s jacket.

“Oh shit. You’re right,” Coley said.

Tramble aimed, but before he could fire and drop the man, screams came from the direction of the village.

“What in the hell?” Coley said.

A new force of Germans came out of the tree line near the village. They were dressed in a mixture of white and regular Infantry camouflage, but carried little weaponry.

They didn’t walk in columns, and they didn’t show any sign of military training. They moved at a fast clip, but when they spotted their comrades, some of them broke into a run.

The Nazi who’d been pretending to be a medic shook his head, rose, and ran back toward the fence, gesturing for the others to join him.