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That Hemingway, or whoever it was, knew what it was all about, he sure as hell knew the score, Corporal Schmitzer thought as he studied the white expanse of the valley and the hazy outline of the trails leading down and through the rocky gorges and fir trees.

Chapter Eleven

December 16, 1944. The Ardennes. Saturday, 0530 Hours.

In the first half of December, 1944, a number of intelligence summaries and statements were distributed to appropriate units in the American and British and German sectors of the Ardennes.

United States Army Intelligence, on December 10th, 1944, submitted its daily report to Eisenhower headquarters at SHAEF (Supreme Headquarters Allied Expeditionary Forces), Versailles, France. The report conceded that “beyond vague rumors, there is no further news of General Josef ‘Sepp’ Dietrich’s Sixth SS Panzer Army.”

The daily Allied Intelligence report for December 12th, 1944, concluded: “It is now certain that attrition is sapping the strength of German forces on the western front. The crust of defenses is thinner, more brittle and more vulnerable than it appears to our troops on the line. A German collapse may develop suddenly and without warning.”

December 16th, 1944: At an early morning staff meeting of Allied general officers at Twenty-first Army Group headquarters, British Field Marshal Bernard Montgomery summed up enemy options and capabilities in these words: “The enemy is at present fighting a defensive campaign on all fronts. His situation is such that he cannot stage major offensive operations. Furthermore, at all costs, he has to prevent the war from entering on a mobile phase; he has not the transport or the petrol that would be necessary for mobile operations, nor could his tanks compete with ours in the mobile phase.”

At midnight on December 15th, 1944, this message from Field Marshal Gerd von Rundstedt was read to all commands of German Army Group B: “Soldiers of the western front. Your great hour has come. We gamble everything. You carry with you the supreme obligation to give all to achieve the ultimate objectives for our Fatherland and our Führer.”

Operation Christrose was launched on December 16th, 1944, approximately three hours after the following United States Army Intelligence summary was released at General Eisenhower’s headquarters, SHAEF. It was a one-line report which read:

“There is nothing to report on the Ardennes front.”

Chapter Twelve

December 16, 1944. Six kilometers from Werpen, Saturday, 0630 Hours.

On a slope above the hill where Section Eight’s guns faced east, the mongrel dog was barking at something he heard or smelled in the darkness. To the north and east there was the heavy, curiously human sound of artillery, noises like distant coughings and mutterings accompanied by gleaming streaks of rockets and tracers through black cloud masses. Trankic was shouting something at the men on the cannon and machine guns.

A censor deep in Docker’s mind tried to screen out the sound of that worried voice. He’d been in his bedroll in a drifted lee of the wind only an hour or so, shaved and washed, carbine beside him, his boots drying out beside Dormund’s fire.

He began to wake then, hearing Trankic calling to the men and remembering parts of his fragmented dreams. On his last shift, he had monitored the radio and looked at the mail picked up at Battery, and there was an uneasy residue of all that with him now... Bandleader Glenn Miller, Captain Glenn Miller, eight hours overdue on a London-to-Paris flight. That had been on the Armed Forces network, and a stateside wrap-up of Roosevelt’s first month of an unprecedented fourth term as President. And coincidentally, a letter from his father had said: “The people is a beast. I don’t know who said that first but it’s on the mark and FDR knows it. He’s bought the people of this country the way you buy a dog’s loyalty — through the stomach, through handouts and giveaways. But since I’d rather write of real dogs than FDR, I must tell you the big male, Sheboygan, has shown scant regard for...” He blinked his eyes to focus on the canteen of steaming coffee that Trankic was forcing into his hands.

“You better take a look, Bull. This sure as hell ain’t our artillery.”

“Go get my boots, Trank.”

Walking to the guns, his boots hot and stiff, Docker looked at the horizon. In the east there were bright flashes at ground level. Above them vivid parabolas of tracers and rockets showed against the sky. The artillery shells sounded like freight trains rumbling over their heads. Docker tightened his cartridge belt and buckled his helmet strap. “Schmitzer, get everybody out of their sacks. Trankic, try to raise Battery or Battalion...”

The sergeant looked toward the horizon through his binoculars and saw what looked like tiny balls of fire spurting up behind the mountains. Then he felt rather than heard a deeper sound, a jarring noise that seemed to come up from the ground and through his boots, the sound of tanks. He told Farrel, “Pick up a bazooka, Tex, and get the jeep over here.” Larkin and Schmitzer were ordered to load the food, ammunition and gasoline and warm up the engines of the trucks. “I want to move out fast if we have to. If we get separated, our fall-back position is Lepont on the Salm, two kilometers southeast of grid coordinates A-7 on our large-scale map.”

He took the wheel of the jeep and with Trankic beside him and Farrel in the rear, drove down the trail toward the valley. Ahead of them snow glistened in the blackout beams of their headlights.

Farrel, holding two bazooka projectiles notched carefully in the fingers of his left hand, was watching the road with steady eyes. Docker stopped the jeep fifty yards below the crest of the next hill and the men scrambled the rest of the way on foot, crawling through frozen underbrush to a hedge of gnarled trees.

Rocket bombs flashed methodically through the skies, hanging along the horizon like flaming lanterns. Several thousand yards off they saw barrage lights rising from the next ridge of hills, coating the underside of the low clouds, the reflections brilliantly illuminating the white ground.

Docker’s glasses picked up movement in the distant woods and then he could see German soldiers in long winter-camouflage coats, rifles a dark slash across their chests, the splintered reflections from the barrage lights shining on their helmets.

He lowered his glasses because now he could see the German troops with his naked eye and, not more than a thousand yards away, a white skirmish line moving relentlessly through sparse stands of beech and fir trees. They were still like toy soldiers at this distance, black boots moving up and down as rhythmically as pistons, their long white uniforms and black helmets blurred by flurries of snow. However, when the winds changed abruptly, blowing harder toward Docker and his men, the illusion of miniature soldiers disappeared, the changing gales bringing the sound of their singing to the Americans, a heavy rumble of song that stiffened the fine hairs on Docker’s neck.

“Jesus Christ, Bull,” Trankic whispered, “there’s thousands of them.”

The effect of the reflected barrage lights was magical; the ranks of soldiers seemed to merge with the leaping shadows, disappearing and materializing again in the gleaming mists rising from the hoar-white fields and forests.

Trankic grabbed Docker’s arm and pointed beyond the soldiers to the distant silhouettes of German tanks grinding through the snow. Docker gave his orders with gestures, and the men scrambled to their feet and ran down the hill to the jeep.

The guns were hooked to the trucks, with Larkin and Schmitzer in the cabs. Docker swung the jeep in front of the lead truck and pumped his fist up and down in the air.