Part 30 (1/2)
Ignoring the order for communications silence he had just given, he got back on the radio and cried, ”Great soldiers of the Motherland, this is Werewolf. Tonight we expand our empire! Tonight we make Canada bow to Mother Russia!”
He thrust his fist in the air, glanced back at the vehicle commander in the BMP behind him, who returned the fist.
Good man. If he hadn't, Noskov might've shot him.
His smile grew even broader.
Someone would write a history book about this battle. And Noskov would lean over that man's shoulder, making sure NOSKOV was spelled correctly.
”All right,” he said into the vehicle intercom. ”When we draw close to the obstacle, we will s.h.i.+ft to the embankment and let the engineers begin breaching operations.”
”But, sir?” said the driver. ”I thought you wanted us to blast on through. I thought you wanted the glory.”
”Yes, but as I look at that obstacle now, I see a trap, not glory. The engineers will go in first.”
”Yes, sir.”
”Do you think me a coward?”
”No, sir. And my girlfriend back home in St. Petersburg thanks you for this.”
”I'm sure she does. Now pull over.”
Noskov waved on the BMPs carrying the engineers, those great heroes and saints who would roll out a carpet stained with blood.
THIRTY-FIVE.
Sergeant Nathan Vatz had left six of the Canadian hunters in charge of the roadblock team, and they had done a remarkably fine job organizing and positioning the men.
Once the Russian engineers pulled up in front of the obstacle and got out to inspect the area, they received some immediate Canadian hospitality.
From the piles of snow lining the embankment there suddenly emerged more than two hundred local boys, armed with shotguns, .22s, and grenades given to them by Vatz's team. These rural boys had about as much heart and att.i.tude as any men on earth.
This was their land. Their country.
The grandfathers of these invading Russians had fought in Afghanistan in the 1980s, and now their descendants would be taught the same lesson-that sheer numbers and technological superiority will still not triumph over a foe trying to protect his home. Never underestimate sheer force of will and the heart and courage to win.
Vatz stared through his binoculars from his position about a half kilometer west atop the roof of a small gas station, watching as the Canadians brought down about fifty Russians, killing many of them at point-blank range. It was like medieval carnage out there.
Grenades dropped into open hatches.
Buckshot blasted into red-nosed faces.
And Vatz could almost hear ”O Canada,” the national anthem, playing in his ears as several BMPs lit up, smoke and flames pouring from their hatches.
But then some of the other Spetsnaz vehicles behind the engineering team made their move. The drivers floored it, rolling hard and fast to plow through the long piles of cars.
As they approached, their gun tubes flashed and boomed, sending 100 mm HE-FRAG (high explosive fragmentation) rounds at the roadblock. Pieces of flaming derby car debris sailed into the sky, taking flight like NASCAR racers forced into the wall and tumbling wildly.
The BMP gunners opened up with their machine guns, chewing into those patriotic and ferocious hunters, the drivers continuing on at top speed-doing exactly what Vatz expected they would when faced with the ambush.
And they were in for an even bigger surprise.
”You seeing this?” Beethoven asked him. ”I think they got six, maybe seven BMPs! Those boys are hardcore!”
”They're doing one h.e.l.l of a job, but it's a one-way trip. They knew it. You could see it in their eyes when we left. But that's what they wanted.” Vatz got on the radio, told his pair of snipers posted on the rooftops nearby to lend a hand.
The cracks of thunder commenced. And for some of the Russians, G.o.d was a bullet.
Hallelujah.
Vatz checked in with Black Bear, who had taken the other half of Berserker team to the neighborhoods to join Zodiac team in flus.h.i.+ng out the remaining snipers-no small task-and they most certainly needed more time, which was being bought by Vatz and his group of h.e.l.l raisers.
The majority of the local force had been given to Vatz to delay the oncoming battalion, though a handful of residents were scattered throughout the town and remained within their homes, all at the ready.
It was, of course, imperative that Vatz's team remain alive so they could be the eyes and ears of the 10th Mountain Division as their first elements arrived. Soon. He hoped.
”All right, here we go,” said Vatz, resuming his surveillance. ”Suicide run.”
The first few BMPs had blown a pretty deep hole in the obstacle, with only about ten cars left in their way. Two drove up side-by-side and began ramming the pile.
Impatience was a beautiful thing, and the Russians behind exhibited that perfectly. They made the obvious choice of taking the paths of least resistance on either side of the road, unwilling to wait for the first two vehicles to open the lane. Those frustrated drivers a.s.sumed that the snow couldn't be very deep, that their vehicles would make it across that terrain and they could return to the road behind the stretch of cars. Why blow through all those vehicles when you could go around them?
If the Russian engineers had survived, they would have cautioned those drivers not to veer around any enemy obstacle.
But the engineers were dead. And the recon troops inside those lead BMPs would join them for shots of vodka in the afterlife.
Two BMPs had broken off from the convoy, one heading left around the pile of cars, one heading right.
”Just like you said, Vatz,” muttered Beethoven. ”Just like you said.”
Vatz tensed.