Natalia temporarily retreated behind her lover, quietly staring at the tall, broad and resolute back of the person she had decided to entrust with her life, her eyes full of love never leaving the back of this body for a moment.
Malashenko, who replaced Natalia and stood in front of the microphone, faced the audience: his soldiers, commanders, and all the comrades present have already thought about what he should say.
What, Malashenko, who had mixed feelings at the same time, quietly spoke.
"According to the program schedule, I shouldn't actually be standing here, standing in front of the microphone. There is no prior arrangement, comrades."
"I can stand here entirely because I thought of something on a whim. Here, I would like to ask all the comrades present to give me a chance and give me some time to do something I must do.
It is necessary to do what needs to be done here, in front of all the comrades of Stalin’s 1st Guards Tank Division.”
Malashenko's speech exceeded many people's expectations. Even Valeski, who was standing in a corner behind the stage and originally planned to arrange appearances in the next set of programs, was a little stunned.
"Comrade Valeski, what should we do now? Do we have any emergency plans?"
The assistant who saw this scene was holding a performance list and a notepad and asked anxiously. Upon hearing this, Valeski, who looked unhappy, rolled his eyes at his uninterested young assistant and said coldly.
"Don't you have eyes? Can't you see that the person standing in front of the microphone is General Malashenko?"
"This is his unit, the leader division under his leadership, and he is the division commander! We must cooperate with the work of comrade general, and everything is based on this. Have you forgotten how the comrade commander told us in the meeting before departure?
?How could there be such a stupid Suka like you!"
"...Yes, I understand. I will arrange for the program to be postponed and we will make arrangements based on the specific situation."
"Well, that's pretty much it. It's pretty decent. Let's go!"
"OK!"
The assistant was busy doing what he was supposed to do, but Valeski was still a little confused and didn't understand. What did the comrade general mean by what he just said?
Anyway, based on Valeski's experience, he can't guess at this moment, so he can only wait and see what will happen next.
In front of the microphone in the center of the stage, under the illumination of the lights, Malashenko continued to speak with emotional words.
"I think that every one of us here, every comrade, has lost someone very important to us in this sudden war."
"It could be an older brother, younger brother, older sister, younger sister, a life and death comrade around you, a playmate you grew up with, a classmate you studied with, or even your own parents and children."
"They are all extremely important people to us. Although I am an orphan whose parents died of illness when I was very young. I relied on the help of the villagers and grew up eating hundreds of meals, but this does not mean that I have no
Important people were lost in this war."
"My closest comrades, I still remember their names. Commander Yakov died outside Moscow, Lieutenant Vasily fell on the way to evacuate from Kharkov to Stalingrad, Maxim
The battalion commander and platoon leader Andrei died on the eve of reaching Stalingrad."
"My brother, one of my closest comrades-in-arms and comrade, Nikolai, the former electromechanical operator of the No. 177 train crew, died in the purgatory train station in Stalingrad to save me. When countless crazy enemies,
When I rushed towards his scarred body, I could only lead the other comrades to keep retreating and take one last look at him in despair and grief."
Malashenko's eyes were already sparkling with tears as he spoke. This majestic 1.9-meter-tall tower-like man who had won two Hero of the Soviet Union awards and was known as the tank hero of the Red Army could not control himself at this moment.
Emotions surge outward.
"Each of us has lost someone we cherish in this war, more than once."
"The bloody wounds are revealed again and again by the cruel reality. Those who are still alive must take over the legacy of the dead and continue to live and fight! We must let those fascist bastards who regard us as despicable and inferior human beings
Know whose territory these fascist idiots are running wild on! Let them know who is the winner of this war and who is the boss!"
"We endure the grief and the scars of loss. Today, I want to be here to commemorate all those important people who have died in this war because of the ruthless and brutal invasion of the Fascist thugs."
"This is not for a specific person. The song I am about to sing is dedicated to all of them."
"Live up to the sacrifices of every soldier and every important person! Victory will eventually belong to the proletariat and the great Red Army!"
That is to say, at the final moment when Malashenko's words faded and a new beginning was about to begin, Valeski, who had extremely keen professional sense, suddenly had a flash of inspiration and realized something. Then with lightning speed, he quickly removed himself from the situation.
He took out the notepad and pencil he carried with him from his pocket.
Valeski had a vague feeling that what Malashenko would do next might be unprecedented.
He must seize this opportunity! This opportunity to lead his team to perform in Stalin's 1st Guards Tank Division may be the beginning of his meteoric rise in the future. The key lies in whether he can grasp the details, and Valeski believes
Your own intuition will never be wrong.
All eyes in the audience were focused on Malashenko. Everyone knew what their comrade was about to do. It was probably a song they had never heard before.
"You know what? I want to live so much."
"Go watch the fiery sunrise, live just to love all the people who accompany you."
"You know what? I want to live so much."
"At dawn, I wake up with you. Make coffee while the world is still sleeping soundly."
"You know what? I want to live so much."
"You don't have to publish it in newspapers, you have to share it all. Live so that your children will never forget it."
There was no accompaniment or any instrumental melody, but such simple and straightforward lyrics made Malashenko burst into tears just by singing this.
"You know what? I want to live so much."
"At the moment of your sacrifice, stand up and declare to everyone: I will come back, even if I fall."
There was another syllable pause, and the soldiers in the back row who would not block other people's sight could not help but stand up with tears and red eyes, standing solemnly.
"You know what? I want to live so much."
"In that fateful minute, forget all the unpleasantness and forgive everyone. Forgiveness is salvation, I know this."
"You know what? I want to live so much."
"Become a sleeping cherry fairy in the winter room, in order to bloom in the spring and grow into a new tree."
...
"You know what? I want to live so much."
"Become a sleeping cherry fairy in the winter room, in order to bloom in the spring and grow into a new tree."
When the last repeated syllable fell and the cycle was sung, what appeared before our eyes was the solemn and solemn sight of everyone in the audience, led by the political commissar, standing up and wiping away tears.
Soldiers are never afraid of sacrifice, and they may even feel regretful and unwilling because their lives can only be dedicated to their beloved motherland once.
They have no desires and no extravagant hopes for any glory or wealth. From beginning to end, they only have the simplest smiles and the most straightforward and simple words on their faces.
"I love my motherland and I am willing to give everything I have."
They just hope that future generations will not forget the sacrifices they made, the blood they shed, and their lifelong efforts for that incomparably great cause.
When spring comes, the flowers bloom, the children read aloud with their stories, and the bright sunshine shines through the windows on the three-foot podium and every desk, shining with the light of hope.
The soldiers are smiling in that place that is extremely far away, but always closest to the motherland they love all their lives.