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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Angst had to take a few moments to collect his thoughts and, more pressingly, to stifle old fears. “I know you’re a devout man, Willi, and that your beliefs are sincere, but you have allowed some of the more strident, and I would go so far as to say the hysterical, pronouncements of National Socialist political officers to cloud your judgment.”

“I could never be influenced by some party hack in an army uniform. Not when I compare their hollow words with what I have seen with my own eyes,” Schmidt replied.

“Perhaps not, but it has grown increasingly difficult to escape the doctrine. It’s served up whenever there is the opportunity. When I first got to Russia, during the last leg of the trip, a political officer boarded the train. He addressed not only the troops new to the eastern front, like me, but those returning from leave and medical furlough. A lot of those guys had heard it all before and didn’t balk at having to hear it again. They sat, enraptured, as though the words would make their slaughter more bearable. The officer went on to describe the Fuehrer and the party as instruments of God entrusted with a sacred duty to defend Germany and western civilization. Communism was a creation of Satan let loose upon the world to destroy it. We weren’t fighting other men, like ourselves, but automatons under the control of the devil. The war in Russia went beyond economics or ideology, he said; it was a fight for the spiritual life of German culture. The very soul of the German people. On an intellectual level, what he said struck me as utter nonsense, but emotionally the idea scared the shit out of me. Maybe we are fighting for the spiritual and cultural existence of western civilization, despite the Brits and the Amis. I don’t know. What I do know is, we’re all locked into a nightmare that there’s no getting out of. I only hope to be still alive after it plays itself out. There is one thing I do know: the Bolsheviks and Stalin are no more the physical embodiment of the antichrist than the Fuehrer is the savior the party makes him out to be.”

“The same beast, only with different heads. You’ve read your bible, Johann. You know of the false prophets who come in his name.”

With a conviction of this magnitude, it was futile to argue, Angst thought.

“I am sorry for the way I treated Braun,” Schmidt said quietly.

“Don’t give it another thought. Ten seconds after you left, he didn’t feel a thing.”

“How I envy him. No matter how terrible it all is, he takes it on and still manages to have a good laugh.”

“Even if it is at our expense. He has a talent for keeping us all from going mad, God bless him.”

“It is a terrible burden to know how things really are. To know the truth,” Schmidt said.

Angst no longer knew what to say. He could not change his friend’s beliefs, and he hadn’t the strength to continue a political or moral discussion to try to sway his opinions. Besides, it was late, and he had a long stretch ahead of him. Schmidt was a decent fellow, but he was a trifle maudlin; and at present he was allowing this aspect of his temperament to rule. Now Angst was feeling morose. Over the last couple of days, he’d been depressed as well, and the last thing he needed to hear that he was witnessing the end of the world. “You had better get some sleep, Willi. Your turn at watch will come around sooner than you’d want.”

Schmidt agreed and said good night. Alone now, with the darkness as no comfort, Angst’s mind raced, and his stomach knotted. The only apocalypse he was experiencing was personal and caused by men. He knew the chances of surviving this conflict were slim. Maybe the only thing left to save is my soul , he thought. Maybe that is what Schmidt is struggling with, but he’s put it into a larger context . As a boy, the Book of Revelation had filled Angst’s impressionable young mind with fear and dread. Back home, the parish priest, Father Günter, would read the entire book at Christmas Day mass. Whether the insufferably long reading was a canonically legitimate inclusion to the nativity celebration, or if it had significance for the priest alone, Angst did not know. He could visualize the portly, white-haired priest turning purple as he bellowed the scripture. He suffered from a severe speech impediment, a lisp, and it was an awful experience to have to sit and listen to a voice that sounded as if it came from the mouth of a deranged baby who had only just learned how to talk. Having to go to church on Christmas would ruin the rest of the day. No amount of holiday treats or toys could dispel the lurid images of stars falling from the sky, the moon turning the color of blood, and, most horrific of all, the dead rising from their graves to receive the last judgment. His child’s mind would quake at the thought of legions of skeletons in moldy rags, parading through the streets of town. He could never gauge the effect this prophecy had on his parents. They drank their fill of punch and schnapps, feasted on the Christmas roast, and laughed with relatives and friends. His mother reprimanded him for brooding on such a joyful day. When he told her what he was brooding about, Father Günter’s sermon, she told him nothing bad would ever happen to him, if he was good. He ceased going to church after he turned seventeen. The old tale from the remote past had long ceased to have a hold over him. Until now, that is, with this mass exodus of armies, civilians, and countless animals; fires raging everywhere—an eerie sight that filled him with a dread far more potent than anything he’d ever felt as a child. Schmidt could be right , he thought; perhaps this is the last great conflict, the battle for the souls of men. And what judgment will I receive for my contribution? he wondered.

* * *

Soon after he had eaten, Schroeder took a shelter half for a cover and lay down on one of the benches. He suggested Wilms do the same before somebody else in the crew beat him to it. The signalman wasn’t ready for sleep yet, however, so he sat on the bench opposite the corporal and smoked. Voss had taken his place in the co-driver’s seat to monitor the radio, an indication that the first watch had begun, and Detwiler, armed with an MP40, had since taken his post on the south side of the laager. Schroeder had closed his eyes and was intent on going to sleep, but Wilms’s fidgeting made it difficult to shut out his surroundings. “How long do you think this is going to take?” Wilms asked the corporal.

“How long is what going to take?”

“The mission.”

“You heard what the captain said. We will remain on this side of the river until Red Vengeance is destroyed. Now, stop annoying me and go to sleep.”

Wilms was able to contain himself for no more than a minute before he spoke again. “I wonder if we will be assigned to another Stug when we finally get back to brigade,” Wilms said, referring to the self-propelled assault gun that had been destroyed.

“I seriously doubt it. There weren’t enough guns before the Tortoise breakthrough, and there’s even less now, I would assume. Unless brigade gets re-outfitted—and I don’t see that occurring—we will be sent to join the infantry at the front line.”

“Did the captain signal headquarters to inform them of our whereabouts and ask permission to borrow us for the time being?”

“He said he would, although I don’t know if he extended the same courtesy for Angst and his bunch. I doubt if they’d be missed at all.”

“I wonder what headquarters will say about losing Pieper and the assault gun?”

Schroeder threw the shelter half off to the side in anger and sat up. “You won’t have to worry about that.”

“There’s bound to be an inquiry.”

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