Дэвид Муди - Berlin or Bust

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An airborne operation of German, American, and British paratroopers drop on Berlin in this exciting new episode in the WW2 zombie series, THE FRONT!
While the Battle of the Bulge turns into a bloodbath due to the introduction of a serum designed to create super soldiers but creating flesh-eating zombies, a German paratrooper unit rests in Genoa, Italy after years of hard warfare. They celebrate an announced armistice hours before flying to England to learn the truth: Germany has collapsed due to the spread of these monsters, and they must work with their former enemies to drop on Berlin and recover a pure sample of the Overman serum.
What follows is an inside look at how the elite German paratroopers fought and their bloody homeward mission to recover the Overman serum before all Europe falls.

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Muller lowered his head into his hands, sobbing. Wolff gripped the back of his neck and squeezed, hoping to share his strength. Trying to convey to the young soldier that he was with family right now, Germans who would take care of him.

Achtung ,” Oberst Heilman snapped. “We are no longer facing the possibility of defeat but extinction itself. The nation needs you to be strong.”

The colonel’s words calmed them long enough for Wolfensohn to go on. “I assisted the Wehrmacht and Allies in negotiating a cease-fire. Many of our comrades are right now fighting alongside the British and Americans at the Meuse. The government is broken, however, with Party officials giving contradictory orders. Some love the nation and humanity enough to work with our enemies to save it. Others consider us traitors and will do anything to stop us.”

As the SS battalion had tried at the airfield.

“The British dropped on Poland and found the camp where the experiments were taking place,” the SS officer said. “The next step is Berlin. There, we will find a pure sample of the pathogen and specialized antibodies synthesized to neutralize it. From this, we can create a vaccine to prevent its continued spread. Possibly even a cure for those infected not yet crossed into a mortal state. Maybe even a weapon to allow the dead to rest in peace.”

Heilman stepped in again. “For the next three days, you will train for Operation Valhalla. We will certainly see the hardest fighting of the war, but we will gain victory. Failure means the destruction of the fatherland.”

Wolff didn’t have to think about it. Whatever it took to save Germany from annihilation and prevent this disease from spreading, he’d do it. He stood with a fierce cry, raising his clenched fist.

The rest of the Fallschirm rose to their feet with a roar.

CHAPTER SEVEN

TRAINING

At dawn, the Fallschirmjäger awoke to calisthenics and training. Most of the men had to be issued British parachutes, lacking their own. These had four straps, not two like the German counterpart. As a result, the Tommy paratroopers could steer in the air, though it hardly mattered from a jump height of 250 meters.

Muller marched to the top of the wood platform and jumped into space. His stomach lunged into his throat as he fell the three meters toward the hard ground.

He struck the earth and went into a clumsy roll that left him on his back.

Sergeant Wilkins, the British trainer, clenched his fists. “I thought you were a bloody parachute unit!”

“No excuse, Herr Feldwebel ,” Muller gasped.

Actually, he had an excellent excuse. Major airborne operations had all but ceased. He hadn’t received parachute training. Today’s Fallschirmjäger were elite light infantry, not true airborne troops.

It didn’t matter. He wanted to go to Berlin.

“Bloody ball of chalk, this is,” the British sergeant growled. “Get in line, craphat! Do it again.”

Jawohl, Herr Feldwebel! ” Muller cried as the squad groaned. They’d exercised, learned, ate, and trained without pause all day on the cold airfield.

“Good lad,” Wilkins said in German, though it didn’t quite translate. The next man went up to make his practice jump.

The Fallschirm didn’t mind hard training. They’d suffered worse in basic training and in combat. Paratroopers were expected to rush into battle, often against terrifying odds. Many times, they hurried to the front without orders, following a latitude for action unique in the Wehrmacht . They fought to achieve their mission objective until shredded, and even then they’d keep going until victorious or dead. For all this, they took appalling losses.

They were lethargic now, however, their once unquenchable spirit diminished. Few of them slept more than a few hours last night, if at all. They’d lost the war. Their country was being overrun by horrible creatures created by their own leaders, and now they had to make a drop on Berlin to stop the spread.

Aus der traum. The dream really was over, replaced by a nightmare.

“Remember,” said Wilkins, who’d fought the creatures in the Ardennes and Poland, “don’t let them get too close, aim for the head, and never, ever hesitate.”

It sounded simple, but it wasn’t. As the British sergeant had explained, this wasn’t going to be sustained, long-range fire between units moving through cover and concealment to pin and flank the other. In other words, what Muller and the other replacements had trained for, what the veterans knew of battle.

This was going to be getting close enough to fire a reliable headshot against an unarmed man loping right at you, a man who might be wearing a steel helmet. Barring that, a bayonet thrust under the chin up into the brain. The enemy could come singly out of nowhere or rush you in vast numbers.

Miss enough times, allow the undead to get close enough, and you’d find yourself both on the menu and drafted into the army of the undead. If you were bitten but left alive, you had anywhere from three to six hours before you turned, the sergeant had told them.

Colonel Adams sauntered over with his British riding crop to inspect the men. “How are they coming along, Sergeant?”

Muller had learned enough English in his year at university to follow the conversation.

“They’re good soldiers, the best the Jerries have, but we already knew that, sir,” Wilkins said. “I’ll make them good paras.”

The colonel twirled the end of his mustache. “They don’t jump anymore. More than one-half of these fellows haven’t even trained for it, I suspect.”

“Morale’s an issue. They’re a spirited lot, but what we told them last night must have come as quite a shock. Three of them took their own lives last night.”

Muller started at this news. He’d heard about it but dismissed it as rumor.

“All the more reason to get them moving,” Adams said. “The fog over the Channel’s lifted. The operation has been moved up. We’re jumping tomorrow night if the weather holds.”

“Christ.” The sergeant flinched. “Sorry, sir. I meant to say, ‘Splendid idea.’”

Weber hissed, “What are you staring at, Muller? You’ve got an odd look.”

“I’m listening to the Tommies talk about the operation.”

“Oh? What are they saying?”

Muller shushed him and listened. Another paratrooper hit the ground and rolled.

“You feel strongly about the three days?” the colonel asked.

“For an operation like this? Six weeks would do nicely, sir.”

“Monty and Eisenhower won’t hold. You’ve got one more morning and afternoon to teach these men our equipment. The party’s on, Sergeant.” The colonel regarded the Germans with cold hatred. “Quite. Carry on, then.”

Wilkins saluted. “Sir,” he said, pronouncing it sah . He turned to the Fallschirm . “All right, once more around, chaps, then you can go get your scoff.”

Muller returned to the top of the platform and made a flawless last jump.

“Well done, para,” Wilkins told him.

Dankeschön, Herr Feldwebel. ” Muller was ready to go to Berlin.

He wasn’t sure he was ready for what he might find when he got there, however.

The city had gone dark. Most of his memories of the capital were troubled. The hard times of his youth, followed by the stifling paranoia of the Nazis. But he had plenty of happy memories with family and friends. Berlin was home.

His father, mother, sister, aunts and cousins lived there. His university professors, the loud neighbors, the friendly postman, the swearing butcher, the girl he’d flirted with in class but never had the courage to ask out.

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