Part I
Private Halstead grumbled about the cold of New Hangchow 2, the way he always did when he pulled border patrol.
“You warm-blooded Scandinavian. This isn’t any colder than back home in New Bonn” scoffed his partner and friend, Erwin Schimmel, “anyways, it’s dark, and they can’t lay too much rail in the dark.” He jerked his thumb toward the Deutscherail workers on the hilly terrain.
“I still don’t see why we’re here. I mean, this outfit was good enough for frontline duty in the China War. Why are we stuck on this outpost now? Heck, why does Germany even hold onto this nowhere town?” replied Eric.
“You really don’t know much, do you? You ever been down to the docks and see how busy they are?”
“Yeah, I guess they’re sort of busy. Never really thought about it much, though.”
“You don’t really think that’s normal for a town of 30,000 people, do you? This little burg supplies the entire country with dyes. Besides, taking an isolated town deep in our own territory against a bunch of Chinamen waving spears is hardly frontline duty.”
“Well, if it’s that important, why send us here then, and not one of the big, bad infantry brigades, with those Rommel fighting vehicles they’re always going on and on about… or a Panzer division?”, Eric reversed his logic, hoping to find some way to reason himself back home.
“Boy, look at a map sometime. New Dnepropetrovsk, just over those mountains, is the only thing close to here that’s not Chinese, and the Chinese aren’t going to be dumb enough to try anything after the beating we just gave them. Those Rommels and Panzers cost money, a lot more than our rifles and jeeps. Face it, buddy, they don’t expect anything to happen here and we’re the most expendable if something does.”
Eric eyed his friend with a beaten look, “Well, why does it have to be so damn cold, then. It’s 1740, for crying out loud, put a heater in…”
“Shhh!” Erwin cut him off, whispering “You hear that, over there on the mountain?”
Eric listened, and heard the unmistakable rumbling of the Rommel Infantry Fighting Vehicle, which soon stopped, followed by voices. “Uh-oh, that’s no Rommel.”
“Nope, they’re speaking Russian,” was Erwin’s reply.
Eric’s blood ran a little colder.
Private Halstead grumbled about the cold of New Hangchow 2, the way he always did when he pulled border patrol.
“You warm-blooded Scandinavian. This isn’t any colder than back home in New Bonn” scoffed his partner and friend, Erwin Schimmel, “anyways, it’s dark, and they can’t lay too much rail in the dark.” He jerked his thumb toward the Deutscherail workers on the hilly terrain.
“I still don’t see why we’re here. I mean, this outfit was good enough for frontline duty in the China War. Why are we stuck on this outpost now? Heck, why does Germany even hold onto this nowhere town?” replied Eric.
“You really don’t know much, do you? You ever been down to the docks and see how busy they are?”
“Yeah, I guess they’re sort of busy. Never really thought about it much, though.”
“You don’t really think that’s normal for a town of 30,000 people, do you? This little burg supplies the entire country with dyes. Besides, taking an isolated town deep in our own territory against a bunch of Chinamen waving spears is hardly frontline duty.”
“Well, if it’s that important, why send us here then, and not one of the big, bad infantry brigades, with those Rommel fighting vehicles they’re always going on and on about… or a Panzer division?”, Eric reversed his logic, hoping to find some way to reason himself back home.
“Boy, look at a map sometime. New Dnepropetrovsk, just over those mountains, is the only thing close to here that’s not Chinese, and the Chinese aren’t going to be dumb enough to try anything after the beating we just gave them. Those Rommels and Panzers cost money, a lot more than our rifles and jeeps. Face it, buddy, they don’t expect anything to happen here and we’re the most expendable if something does.”
Eric eyed his friend with a beaten look, “Well, why does it have to be so damn cold, then. It’s 1740, for crying out loud, put a heater in…”
“Shhh!” Erwin cut him off, whispering “You hear that, over there on the mountain?”
Eric listened, and heard the unmistakable rumbling of the Rommel Infantry Fighting Vehicle, which soon stopped, followed by voices. “Uh-oh, that’s no Rommel.”
“Nope, they’re speaking Russian,” was Erwin’s reply.
Eric’s blood ran a little colder.
Comment