Peter Idone - Red Vengeance

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Red Vengeance: краткое содержание, описание и аннотация

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“As long as I continue to draw breath, my task is to put down that steel beast, Red Vengeance. If I must give chase to as far as the arctic reaches of the Finnish Gulf or across the blazing steppes to the Sea of Azov, I will hunt it down. I will remain on this side of the Dniepr until its severed hydraulics bleed and black diesel fuel gushes from its mauled, smoking hull. This is what I have sworn! Are you with me, grenadiers?”
With these words Captain Hans Falkenstein implores his small vulnerable unit of panzergrenadiers to swear an oath of retribution before embarking on a hellish personal mission of reckoning. As Army Group South retreats toward the safety of the west bank of the Dniepr River, putting everything in its path to the torch, the crushing weight of the Soviet Red Army snaps at its heels. And yet Falkenstein is determined to stay behind in an effort to destroy a mythic Soviet T-34 tank known to war weary German troops as Red Vengeance. As the Wehrmacht suffers defeat after imminent defeat, Red Vengeance is observed, lurking on the horizon like a predator ready to ambush and devour all those who cross its path. Falkenstein’s mission is personal since Red Vengeance had annihilated his reconnaissance unit on the Kalmyk steppe over a year previously. Emerging from that hideous attack wounded, and quite possibly deranged, Falkenstein seeks revenge for the unwholesome, almost joyous slaughter of his men. He believes that Red Vengeance is no mere machine but a construct of evil operating under the control of an occult force.
With the aid of his trusted bodyguard, Khan, an alleged shaman from eastern Siberia, Falkenstein endeavors to employ the shaman’s magic as well as the weapons from his meager arsenal in order to destroy Red Vengeance and put an end to the myth of its invincibility.
Although I have attempted to be as accurate as possible concerning the historical setting of the novel (i.e.) the retreat to the Dniepr and the scorched earth policy enacted by the Wehrmacht, I wouldn’t characterize the novel as strictly historical fiction. I began
in 1997 without a clear intention of writing a full blown novel and especially a book that was over 400 pages in length. I had a few ideas in my head that I wanted to get down on paper and wanted to discover where it would lead. I did a lot of research on the topic and the more I did the more I got hooked. World War 2, and especially the manner in which the war was played out in Russia, was apocalyptic in scope. Researching the material would be at times both emotionally and psychologically daunting. The novel is certainly not an ‘entertainment’ nor do I consider it an adventure; although, for the sake of expediency, it’s tagged as such. I’m reminded of something the French author, poet, and aviator Antoine de Saint-Exupéry had written, “War isn’t an adventure… it’s a disease.”
September 1943. The Wehrmacht has instituted a policy of scorched earth in the southern Ukraine as it retreats to the Dnieper River. Entire armies, civilians, even animals are herded west to escape the onslaught of the Soviet Red Army. All but one man, Captain Hans Falkenstein, or “Mad Falkenstein” as he has come to be known, is determined to remain on the barren burning steppe in an effort to complete his singular mission. While the countryside erupts into flames Falkenstein and a ragtag group of panzergrenadiers, assembled from the whirlwind of a losing war, are pressed into service to help the Captain complete his cycle of revenge. Their orders are to hunt down and destroy the T-34 Soviet tank known as
. A front line myth,
is known as an unstoppable beast by the war weary German troops. Its appearance signifies doom for men, machines, and entire armies. Stalingrad, the winter offensives, Kursk, and now this retreat to form a coherent line of defense along the opposite bank of the Dniepr,
appears yet again. For Falkenstein,
is personal. It destroyed his entire patrol and he emerged from the wreckage of that first encounter terribly maimed… in body and mind. He is of the firm conviction that this T-34 is no mere machine but an embodiment of satanic evil. As Falkenstein leads his small vulnerable unit headlong into the abyss,
awaits like a predator, with a gaping, bloody maw. From the Author
From the Back Cover

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* * *

Above the din of grinding gears and squealing brakes, Falkenstein bellowed curses and commands as Vogel wove around and between the workshops and tool sheds. Like a rabid animal giving chase, Red Vengeance pursued the scout car without letting up. At any given moment, only a brick wall or the tar paper siding of a shed separated them from the plundering, mindless armor. The tank smashed through everything in its path in an effort to head off the elusive scout car and ram it. The small huts and sheds were splintered, flattened, and ground up in the tank’s wake. There was a groaning and tearing of wood and metal that was sickening to hear. Vogel outdistanced the enraged T-34 and turned into the supply yard, where he braked to a stop on the far side of the west perimeter. The sounds of destruction had diminished considerably. Red Vengeance was exhibiting a terrific burst of power before succumbing to the inevitable throes of death. And low on ammunition, too , Falkenstein thought, possibly out of shells . Why else hadn’t it fired? Now it would have to rely on bulk and diesel power to finish the job. Falkenstein did not consider this possibility lightly, yet he was satisfied and anxious. The demon has yet to perform its last trick . He activated the turret control and traversed 90, then 180 degrees and back again. Where did it go? He spoke into the throat mike. “Bring us around to the northeast end of the yard and drive down the nearest alley, west toward the gravel road…did you hear me, Klaus?”

Vogel gave a gasp, the only language available to signify all his fear and fatigue. He’d had more than he could bear and simply wanted to drive away. Instead, he swung around to the left, as he was ordered. Falkenstein saw a narrow separation between two workshops with a minimum of debris littering the ground, where the vehicle could pass. “Turn down here!”

“Right or left at the end, Captain?” To their right was the water tower stand on the far side of the depot, and to the left, although not in view, was the wrecked personnel carrier. The space had opened up considerably here. All the shacks and tool sheds had been demolished, and the workshops were the only two buildings that remained standing. The tank had passed through this part of the depot like an unrelenting storm. “Right or left, Captain?” Vogel repeated urgently.

“Ease out, slowly, but be ready to turn on command.” Vogel did as he was ordered, and as he edged the vehicle halfway out from between the small buildings, he immediately heard a terrific grating sound that echoed throughout the driver’s cabin. The ruined Hanomag lurched forward propelled by the driving force of the tank. “Get under the gun,” Falkenstein screamed into the mike, as he let off a gout of 20 mm rounds that struck the bulges on the tank’s gun cradle. Vogel hesitated when he saw Red Vengeance, at point-blank range, shove the armored personnel carrier directly into their path. The wreck was all that separated them from the steel beast. The tank’s gun cradle was raised to protect the cannon barrel as the hull slammed into the Hanomag’s superstructure, causing its armor siding to collapse. The noise was horrendous as wrenching metal competed with the 20 mm gun and the captain’s rant. A shower of red-orange flame drenched the turret. Voss, at close quarters, mercilessly washed the tank with long spurts from the flamethrower. Somewhere off to the side, Khan was taking potshots as fast as he could reload and fire. Red Vengeance quit throwing its weight behind the wreck long enough to lower the cannon and fire. The armor-piercing round burst through the front end, into the driver’s cabin, and continued on through to the engine compartment, in the rear, where it exploded. A cyclone of shrapnel and fire whirled around the confined space. Vogel, mangled and burning, twitched about. Temporarily blinded by the smoke, Falkenstein tried to extricate himself from the turret. His game leg behaved more uselessly now, as the brace had become undone and new wounds had been inflicted by the exploding shell. The ruptured Hanomag had tipped over, and the powerful driving force of Red Vengeance pushed it along in front, as though it were a plow. Broadsided, the scout car was shoved further down the street until it tipped over onto its side. The tank tracks gained traction and started to mount the Hanomag as the siding buckled and collapsed under the weight. Out from the smoke and trailing flames, Khan appeared and ran headlong into the mass of scorched, twisted metal. Reaching into the turret opening, he took hold of the captain’s outstretched arms and pulled, almost effortlessly, like a feline carrying its young by the nape. Falkenstein was almost clear when the tank heaved upward and poised, motionless, for a moment before it came crashing down. Like some hapless swimmer engulfed by an ocean wave, Khan disappeared under the weight and mass of the machine, becoming part of the revolving tracks and cogs. Horrified, Falkenstein watched, yet again, the crazed, spinning assembly pass before his sight, so compellingly, maddeningly near, as the gore of once-living sinew and flesh became imbedded in the linked, perforated tracks, and the sickly sweet odor of lubricating grease was supplanted by the stench of decaying tissue. He reared back and scrambled, crablike, over the flattened armored bulkheads. Voss rushed to his side and helped support his weight as they limped and staggered toward the nearest workshop, simply to get out of the way and out of sight before the tank turned around or traversed its turret and did more damage. Upon entering the doorway, both men dropped to the floor, exhausted and hurt, the taste of soot and petrol in their mouths. The weight of the flamethrower’s cylinders pushed against Voss’s back and forced him to sit upright. Clumsily, he untangled the hose that had wrapped about his waist and then made a quick examination of the captain’s injuries. There were numerous rents in his tunic and trouser legs that were flecked with blood. Falkenstein waved the attentions aside. “See where Red Vengeance has gone off to.” Depleted, Voss staggered out the door. Faint odors of solvents and mineral oil were noticeable within the close space; the smell roused Falkenstein to a sitting position, but he could not get up, not without help. As he sat contemplating the multitude of small injuries he had received, he decided the wounds were of no serious account; suddenly, he was overcome by a sense of loss and gratitude for Khan. The method of his cohort’s extinction did not overwhelm him; no, the cruel sights of battle could not be averted and were to be accepted as part of the profession he embraced. What he wasn’t immune to was the mobility Red Vengeance continued to exhibit. That horrified him, and he reeled at the demands necessary to make it stop, finally and unequivocally.

Standing in the doorway, Voss watched as the tank’s rear quarters rattled down the smashed muddy street, traversed forty-five degrees to the right, and disappeared down an alley. He followed the signature of heavy exhaust fumes that rose above the workshop rooflines and piles of rubble. “It’s heading toward the supply yard,” Voss said. Across the street he noticed Angst scuttling along the garage wall with Mueller, close behind, carrying the satchel charge. There was still one more magnetic mine in Angst’s possession. The two grenadiers had stayed out of the crossfire of cannons and flamethrower. The street had filled with smoke and reeked of gasoline. Seeing Voss, the men bounded across the street, using the burning hulls for cover, and ducked into the workshop with the lieutenant. Seeing the captain struggle, Angst helped him to his feet. The knee brace had been wrenched; leather straps and metal struts hung loosely about a torn boot; his face was blackened by oily smoke. Yet again, Falkenstein had arisen from the wreckage like some redundant Lazarus, only this time he had more the look of an apprentice whose attempt at sorcery had backfired horribly. He regarded the last of his crew, each one as battered and miserable as he. “No quarter! Not a moment’s peace. Let’s get after it, then.” He draped an arm around Angst’s shoulder and hobbled out of the workshop. Voss took the lead, with Mueller a few steps behind, as they walked out of the building and down the alley. The captain, supported by Angst, brought up the rear.

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