Read The Ten Thousand Online

Authors: Harold Coyle

Tags: #Military

The Ten Thousand (7 page)

From the second-story window of his small bedroom, a middle-aged Ukrainian shopkeeper watched the parade of armored vehicles roll by in the street below. Across the room, sitting up in their bed, his wife waited, struggling to overcome her fright and join her husband. Unable to do so, she called from the bed, “Josef, is it the Russians?”

At first he didn’t answer. It had been a long time since he had served in the Red Army. But as a gunner on a tank stationed in East Germany, he had been trained well to recognize enemy vehicles. The sight of those vehicles right there under his own bedroom window was a shock. Finally, when he did answer, Josef meekly mumbled, “No, not Russians.”

That statement made his wife’s eyes grow large as she threw her hands up over her mouth. “Oh, my God, not the Germans, again?”

Turning, Josef looked at his wife. He was about to ridicule her for making such a silly statement, but then stopped. In this world of theirs, turned upside down, anything, including their worst nightmare, was possible. So instead of chiding his wife for making such a foolish comment, Josef walked across the darkened room, reassuring her as he did so. “No, it’s only the Americans.”

The high-pitched whine of a
BTR
armored personnel carrier racing up the road toward their position caused Ilvanich to turn his attention away from the echo of gunfire and grenade blasts coming from the tunnel and to the road outside the chainlink fence. It was the reaction force, finally. Looking at his watch, Ilvanich noted the time. Slow, he thought. They were too slow and now too late. A Russian reaction force, he reasoned, would have been there in half the time. How fortunate for the Americans, Ilvanich thought, that they are only pitted against Ukrainians and not Russians.

The American reaction to this new threat, however, was not slow. Along the perimeter fence, near the cinder block guard shack, one of the squad leaders shouted back to his platoon leader, “
BTR
on the road, coming up fast and dumb.” At first Ilvanich considered the sergeant’s report to be rather flippant and unmilitary. Then after thinking about it for a moment, Ilvanich chuckled. As he peered into the night beyond the glare of the bright security lights in an effort to spot the reaction force’s
BTR
armored personnel carrier, Ilvanich decided that the American sergeant’s report was in fact quite accurate. The Ukrainians were coming on too fast and in a manner that all but guaranteed their demise. Though dumb was not quite the word he would have chosen, Ilvanich reminded himself that the Americans had a unique unmilitary style that defied all logic and common sense.

Deciding that it would not be a good idea to stay next to the cinder block building once the shooting started, Ilvanich looked for a spot on the firing line along the chainlink fence that would offer both cover and a vantage point. When he saw what he was looking for next to a soldier with a squad automatic weapon, Ilvanich glanced down at his assault rifle to ensure that the safety was engaged before moving over to his new position. His pace was deliberate, not hurried, and he continued to look into the darkness for the approaching
BTR
.

Kevin Pape could feel himself getting excited. This was it! This was no bullshit, for a real enemy armored personnel carrier was coming after them. It wasn’t a plywood panel like the ones they used on the squad assault range at Grafenwöhr. It wasn’t a vismod, a mock vehicle with a fiberglass and sheet-metal shell made up to look like a
BTR
like the ones they went against at the maneuver training area at Hohenfels. This one was real, brim full of pissed-off Ukrainians who were coming after him and the rest of 2nd Squad. Pape didn’t feel the cold. He didn’t notice the Russian major settle down into a prone position next to him. All Pape’s attention was focused where the road disappeared into the darkness as he listened to the noise of the
BTR
grow as it closed on their position. Flexing his right index finger, Pape lightly stroked the trigger of his weapon and waited.

To Pape’s right, Sergeant Couvelha called out to his men armed with AT-4 anti-tank rocket launchers. “Billy, you fire first. And make sure you call out your range before you do.” Couvelha twisted his head toward the second soldier. “Ned, listen up for Billy’s range and watch where his rocket hits.

Make your correction if you need to, then fire. Got it?”

Billy, intently staring through the sight of his rocket launcher, said nothing. He only nodded, a nod that Couvelha didn’t see, not that he needed to. Billy was young but he was solid and dependable. Couvelha knew Billy had heard. Ned, a smile on his face, turned to Couvelha. “No sweat, Sarge.”

Couvelha shook his head. Unlike Billy, Ned was a little too cool, too cocksure of himself for Couvelha, which is why Ned fired second. He was about to tell Ned that he had better pay attention to his front when Billy yelled, “
RANGE
,
TWO
HUNDRED
METERS! FIRING!”

Billy’s announcement gave everyone on the firing line a second to prepare themselves. Half of the men, looking elsewhere, hadn’t seen the
BTR
as it emerged from the darkness. Even when he followed the road, Pape still could not see it. “WHERE?
WHERE
IS
THE
FUCKER? I
DON’T
SEE? ”

The snap that announced the ignition of the AT-4’s rocket motor, followed by a whoosh as the rocket left the tube, cut Pape short. Watching the rocket, Pape was blinded when the shaped-charge warhead made contact with the
BTR
head-on. The jet stream formed by the explosion of the rocket’s inverted cone-shaped warhead cut through the armor of the BTR’s front slope just below the roof. Missing the driver’s head by inches, the jet stream hit the BTR’s gunner square in the stomach after cutting through the ammunition feed chute that fed linked rounds to the BTR’s 14.5mm machine gun. The driver was startled by the sudden explosion on the BTR’s front slope, followed by the spray of molten metal thrown off by the jet stream as it raced past his head, and the screams of the gunner accompanied by the pop, pop, pop of 14.5mm rounds going off behind him. His first reaction was to slam on the BTR’s brakes and duck his head, a motion that caused him to jerk the wheel to the left.

Watching where Billy’s round struck, and noting that it appeared a little high, Ned laid the two-hundred-meter range line of his rocket launcher’s sight on the center of the
BTR
, now slowing and offering an oblique shot as it turned. Lowering the muzzle of his AT-4 ever so slightly, Ned yelled out,


RANGE
,
ONE
EIGHTY
.
FIRING
,” then let fly with his rocket. Though it was not a catastrophic hit, Ned’s rocket ended any desire by the startled BTR’s crew and passengers to stay with their vehicle.

They didn’t even wait for the driver to bring the
BTR
to a complete stop before hatches and doors flew open.

Checking himself, Pape flipped the safety off of his weapon with his thumb and continued to wait until the Ukrainian infantry squad began to spill out before he opened fire. Using the range announced by Ned to sight his weapon, Pape opened with a killing burst, hitting one Ukrainian before he could completely emerge from the BTR’s side door. The Ukrainian’s forward momentum, assisted by the shoving of the man behind him, cleared the line of sight for Pape to fire on the next man coming out the door. The second Ukrainian never realized that his companion had been hit, a fate that he soon suffered himself as Pape squeezed off a second short burst.

From inside the
BTR
, a flame shot out of the opened door, followed by a muffled explosion. A secondary detonation, probably an anti-tank rocket stored inside the
BTR
just like the one that had stopped it, went off, ending the short anti-armor ambush.

Seeing no more targets, Pape eased up, noticing for the first time that the Russian major was staring at him. While holding his weapon steady, Pape twisted his head and looked at the Russian lying less than a meter away from him.

Ilvanich smiled at the American soldier. “You did well. That was excellent shooting. Two five-round bursts, two men dead.”

Pape smiled. “Piece of cake, Major. Piece of cake.”

Ilvanich continued to smile. “Yes, I am sure it was.” These Americans, he thought, take this too casually. What will happen, he thought, when things begin to go against them. “Now you need to prepare for a deliberate attack, dismounted this time, that will come up, oh, over there, to your right.”

Pape looked over to where the Russian major was pointing. “How do you know that?”

Ilvanich smiled. “Because, my friend, two months ago I was doing the same thing at a site like this.

Those men out there may be Ukrainians, but they read the same books I do. There is a gully, three hundred meters over there, that leads almost up to the fence. It is mined near the fence, but the
BTR
will use it to close on us and dismount its troops.”

Not sure about the Russian next to him, Pape looked at the major for a few seconds, then grunted.

“Okay, you’re the expert.” After which he shifted his weapon to the right.

Fifty meters below Ilvanich and Pape, another battle was being waged. In this one the Americans also held the upper hand, a fact that Biryukov could not ignore. The fight, for him and his small detachment in the assembly chamber, had been a disaster. Coming out of the smoke, the enemy had been among his positions before his men had gotten a shot off. At point-blank range the Americans had all but wiped out Biryukov’s command. Only the quick thinking of one of his sergeants saved Biryukov from dying in that first rush with the rest of his men. Not that salvation was going to last long. Unable to move because of a wound that laid most of his side open, Biryukov sat with his back to the wall looking at the elevator doors that led back up to the assembly chamber. Only he, Sergeant Popel, who had dragged him into the elevator, and one other man made it to the lower storage chamber. Though the elevator was locked, Biryukov could hear the Americans working on the other side, preparing charges to force the elevator doors on their level. They had time, but not much. Once the American demolition team was finished, they would have to climb out of the elevator shaft before setting off their charges. After that everything would go fast. First, if they were smart, the Americans would drop grenades to clear the shaft and area by the door. Then the assault force would rappel down on ropes to finish Biryukov and his tiny command before they had recovered from the grenades. It was simply a matter of time before the Americans seized the weapons he was charged with guarding, unless he did something.

Looking down the long corridor to his right, Biryukov turned his mind away from the coming fight.

Yes, he thought, it would be quick. Though some of the attackers would surely die this time, there was only so much that his two men could do. The Americans, Biryukov knew, had come too far to stop.

They would gladly fill the elevator shaft with their dead in order to seize the warheads that sat in the chambers on either side of the long corridor. That the Russians had somehow gotten the naive Americans to do their dirty work didn’t surprise Biryukov. His father had always told him that while the Americans acted like cowboys, they thought like boy scouts. Looking back at Popel, Biryukov coughed, spitting up small clots of blood. “If they do not hurry, I fear I shall miss their grand entrance.”

The sergeant, his face betraying no emotion, nodded. “It shall not be long, Captain. I believe that they are climbing back up the elevator shaft. Once the demolition party is cleared, they will set off the charge.

Then…”

In the silence, the soldier crouching next to the elevator shaft looked at the sergeant, then at Biryukov.

His young face was contorted with fear and apprehension. He, like Biryukov and the sergeant, knew they had no chance. Still he refused to believe it. In his youth he refused to believe that there was no way out.

Coughing, Biryukov looked down the corridor again, then back at the sergeant. “Suppose, Sergeant, we decide not to cooperate with the enemy’s plan?”

The young soldier piped up, “You mean we should surrender?”

Biryukov shook his head. “No. I doubt that they would be willing to take our surrender even if we were willing to offer it. After what happened up there, they have blood in their eyes.” Biryukov paused, glancing once more down the long corridor before he continued without looking back at Popel. It was quiet, terribly quiet, like a tomb. “We must initiate the self-destruct sequence.”

Popel didn’t answer at first. Looking back at him, Biryukov forced a smile. “It is, Sergeant Popel, time to put your treasonable knowledge to use.” Biryukov took his bloody hand away from his side and stretched it out. “As you can see, I cannot do it myself. I need your help, Sergeant.” A spasm of pain went through Biryukov’s body. Grabbing his side again, Biryukov forced himself to stifle a moan. When he could speak, Biryukov pleaded. “Please, Sergeant, hurry. We do not have much time. Do not fail me.”

At the other end of the elevator shaft, Captain Smithy leaned over the open shaft, yelling to the last of the engineers struggling up the ropes to get a move on. This was taking too long for Smithy. The whole operation was not going the way he had wanted it to, and it was starting to piss him off. The gunfire from outside, barely audible to most of the men in his company that were in the assembly chamber, only served to increase Smithy’s anger. Turning to the platoon leader standing next to him, Smithy blurted,

“Why in the hell did those yahoos have to take the elevator down to where the warheads were stored?

Geez, why couldn’t they have used the other one? They really screwed this up.” Smithy looked down the shaft and mumbled again, “They really screwed this up.”

The platoon leader, not knowing if his company commander expected an answer, merely shrugged.

How had the Ukrainians’ action screwed up the operation? As far as the platoon leader could see, everything was in hand. They had cleared the upper chamber at the loss of one dead and three lightly wounded men. The initial portion of the Ukrainian reaction force was taken out by the rest of the company without any problem. And in a few minutes, after the elevator doors at the far end of the elevator shaft had been blown open, all they had to do was dump a few CS tear-gas and smoke grenades down the shaft, slide down the ropes, and clean up any Ukrainians who were still down there.

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