Iushkin is right. Every puff of cigarette smoked on the battlefield may become the last puff. No one can guarantee that he can come back alive to refill one. This is even for Malashenko.
The same is true.
Malashenko, who was completely sleepless, rolled up his sleeves and glanced at the watch on his wrist that he had taken off the body of the previous German colonel. There was only the last hour and twenty minutes left before the scheduled attack.
The troops have already arrived at the starting position and are ready. They can launch an attack immediately after the rapid artillery fire has covered them.
There was no sound in the entire offensive starting position except for the chirping of insects in the summer night. But almost everyone who could sleep was seizing the last moment to take a nap to rest their strength, thinking that there would be nothing wrong if they went out now.
Malashenko simply went along with Iushkin and took out a cigarette case and lighter from his pocket and started operating them.
"When the attack starts later, aim at the German anti-tank guns and knock them all out, Iushkin. If we are unlucky, there may be German tanks waiting for us on the opposite position, if so.
We’ll give priority to those that can move, and remember to keep your eyes open to see clearly.”
According to Malashenko's expectations, the German troops on the opposite side who were in an offensive deployment state and stayed at the offensive starting position would not be easy to deal with.
It is easy to break through the offensive starting position of this group of Germans, but the real difficulty lies behind. It is almost foreseeable to confront the German offensive troops.
Malashenko lit the cigarette in his mouth and took a deep breath. He closed the flame of the lighter with his hand and just put it into his pocket. At the gunner's position, he gave another cigarette to Iushkin who had finished smoking.
Then he replied.
"I won't say this in front of others, Comrade Commander. But I personally feel that there is little hope of winning this counterattack, or in other words, this is a counterattack with no intention of winning."
There were only two people in the tank, Malashenko and Iushkin, who seemed to be very crowded. The words they spoke softly would not be heard by a third person in the closed space. I did not expect that Iushkin could say this at all.
After saying this, Malashenko couldn't help but be slightly startled.
"Did someone say something to you? Iushkin, this doesn't sound like your speaking style."
In Malashenko's eyes, Iushkin, the most important member of his crew, is a young communist fighter with firm beliefs. In his early years, Iushkin was sent to the Party School for training for one year because of his excellent performance when he was attending the Tank Corps Academy.
, returned to the Tank Corps Academy and took an advanced course on tank commanders before graduating.
If Iushkin himself was not willing to leave the No. 177 crew and refused to leave, Malashenko, who had suffered too much losses earlier, even considered making Iushkin the battalion commander and almost took action.
Iushkin, who has a strong faith, is a bit informal on weekdays and loves to joke with Malashenko, but after going to the battlefield, he can transform into a war machine that kills Germans and has no eyesight.
This kind of completely opposite and huge contrasting personality seems to Malashenko to be the best candidate to be a grassroots commander. To be honest, the words "you can't win in counterattack" from Iushkin's mouth are enough to make Marashenko
Shenke was very surprised. This was not at all like his usual style before the Iushkin battle.
A considerable degree of surprise could be seen on Malashenko's face. For a short moment, even Iushkin himself felt that the words just did not come from his own mouth.
"Just now when we were on our way to the offensive starting position, we passed an artillery regiment that was deploying its position. Did you see it? Comrade Commander."
Malashenko, who was still absent-minded at first, immediately changed his mind after hearing this. After thinking about it carefully, it seemed that he had indeed passed by a regimental-level artillery position that was deploying positions overnight.
"I remember, I remembered it, but what does it matter?"
Iushkin, who saw Malashenko being led on the road, smiled slightly, lit a new cigarette in his mouth, blew out smoke rings, and then spoke slowly.
"When we passed by just now, I kept my upper body hanging outside the turret, so I could see it more clearly."
"When I passed behind their artillery position, I saw many people carrying boxes to the car. It looked like a shell box. It was very heavy and required two people to lift it. It was obviously not empty."
"I was very curious at the time why the people behind the artillery positions deployed in front were carrying shell boxes to the car. This was abnormal. But after leaving for a few minutes, Kirill and Seryosha happened to want to make it easier. We
We parked the car for a short while. You were sleeping on the seat, so I got out of the car to smoke a cigarette and chatted with someone nearby."
Iushkin spoke vividly, and Malashenko listened attentively. Telling an interesting story can indeed offset the last tense moment before the war.
"While I was smoking, there was an artillery guard very close to me, so I walked over and had a brief chat with him. I jokingly asked him how long it would take to prepare for the artillery bombardment later, and he answered me that his regiment's
We don’t have enough ammunition and I don’t think we can fight for long, maybe only for a short while.”
"When he said this, I was shocked, because I saw with my own eyes the group of people at the back loading artillery shells onto the truck. There were a lot of them and already filled more than a dozen trucks. I tentatively handed him a cigarette and asked.
I asked him if this information was reliable? He replied that this was the exact information he had heard from the staff of their regiment, and it could not be wrong. It was said by the regiment commander himself."
Malashenko would be an idiot if he didn't understand what Iushkin meant after saying this. Malashenko, who had already figured out what Iushkin wanted to express, couldn't help but frowned.
"You mean that the artillery regiment commander lied to his subordinates in order to prepare for the retreat?"
"At least I think the artillery guard didn't lie. He doesn't look like a liar, but more like an honest farmer and comrade commander."
Facing Iushkin's lack of a direct response, Malashenko, whose eyebrows were furrowed so much that they were about to knit together, suddenly remembered an idiom: a double act.
If Iushkin's inference is true, then the artillery regiment commander was already preparing to run away before the fight started.
Only the minimum amount of ammunition was left on the gun emplacement, and most of the entire boxes of ammunition that had not even had time to be unpacked were loaded onto trucks to be transported away.
The so-called "lack of ammunition" is simply a high-sounding excuse to prepare for an escape.