MAY 10, UNIFIED YEAR 1925
-x-X-x-
Magic Major Tanya von Degurechaff is advancing with a dismal look on her face. No,
she's forced to advance. As an imperial soldier, she should be relishing an attack deep
in enemy territory with a plethora of emotions, but all that is on Tanya's mind is the
natural human desire to not die.
That is probably the inevitable thought of someone compelled to charge by
circumstances. Tanya, skillfully casting formulas and causing enemies to burst into
gory bloom, is doing her best so that on the surface, at least, she is an utterly fearless
field major leading the charge.
"Break! Break!"
"04, Fox Three, Fox Three!"
"Fucking hell, 13 is hit!"
"01 to 10, 11. Cover him! Then hurry up and get him to the rear!"
It's her unit's radio chatter. The troops are less calm than usual. For them to sound
upset during an operation isn't so rare, but exchanges of struggling, frantic curses are
uncommon for the veteran 203rd Aerial Mage Battalion.
That said, it's not exactly surprising. She looks up at the sky and finds herself
fantasizing about punching Being X's head off with her clenched fist.
If God exists, he must be some inflexible being like an evil computer. With that thought,
she forces herself to freeze any mental effort that doesn't help her survive on the
battlefield, and she focuses on combat maneuvers.
The sky is full of shells, and "crowded" doesn't begin to cover it. Like pelting rain or
hail, iron is being shot up from the ground instead of falling down. Just a ton of iron. A
truly brutal amount of iron is flying toward a single target. If this unending blaze of
gunfire in the darkness represents human activity, then I can declare that civilization
has, in a way, evolved in the exact opposite of the ideal direction.
Hell exists on the Rhine. The trials of purgatory are taking place here today.
This is where a human's life is worth the least. No, the lowest price is updated each
day after hitting limit-down at this nearest station to hell. This is where the god of the
dead and evil spirits make bank. A world where human lives plunge into dreadful
deflation relative to lead bullets. This is a purgatory where the boundary between life
and death is the haziest it ever gets.
Distinguished mages are no exception to this rule. Mages are feared on the surface,
but the Rhine is also their graveyard.
"Fairy 01 to CP, we're completely enveloped. We won't last long. What's the situation
like?"
Only mages have trouble dealing damage at eight thousand feet. For fighter planes,
that altitude even allows for some comfort.
On top of that, the high explosives fired at these aircraft and the dense curtain of anti–
air shot could slaughter a mage with ease.
Mages deploy magic walls about a meter from their bodies as protective films.
If that defends them, it's the same as the mages receiving no damage at all. But though
they're magic, these walls aren't so strong.
The biggest ordinary single shot a protective film can defend against in a direct hit is
12.7 mm.
Of course, every mage is a little different, but in a saturation attack, even infantry small
arms can weaken and penetrate a protective film. If they concentrate on defense and
funnel more resources into it, a film can withstand up to about 40 mm.
Even assuming that level of protection, taking direct hits from large-caliber shells is
impossible. Plus, if they do get hit, they may be dazed and unable to rely on their speed to evade.
As a mage's last line of defense, the defensive shell, armor they build with their own
power right up against their flesh, is as strong as you might think. But since they can't
bend the laws of physics, they have to be ready for shocks from impact.
Even dispersed, the shock to the internal organs from a direct hit with a 120 mm
would render a mage helpless. Even if they were lucky and only blacked out, they
would still crash. And probably most of them would get minced where they lie.
For better or worse, my orb, the Elinium Type 95, can repel up to 88 mm shots with
its protective film. Theoretically, it can also create a defensive shell that can stand up
to 120 mm grade shots. I'm not anxious to test that.
Only researchers want to test bulletproof vests in actual combat. The people who have
to use them would never do that.
Plus, when my orb blocks a shot, high-density-interference factors get scattered
around and obstruct magic use over a wide area. It's possible to take advantage of that
effect to make yourself nearly undetectable. A simple way to think of it is that it's like
putting an ECM24 on full blast.
It's probably exceedingly difficult to spot flying objects with optical apparatuses at
night.
Of course, since it's so similar to an ECM, the interference in itself is a frank indicator.
If your radar whites out, it's self-evident that something is there.
As such, the situation is not suitable for stealth maneuvers.
If we're detected but they can't lock on, however, guided missiles or disciplined fire
won't be a threat, so breaking through at high speed and harassing them a bit makes
a great invisibility cloak.
The huge, critical side effect of that is my psychological suffering, but there's nothing
I can do about it.
"Phase two will be finished momentarily. Until phase three orders are given, each unit
should continue designated operational maneuvers."
A noise-filled radio message.
Not only is it encoded, it's a transmission between mages that uses a special format
with directional waves via orbs. You can just barely have a conversation using this
system, so it only really works for practical communications.
The high density of magic remaining in the air creates ear-piercing noise.
I hate that we're supposed to throw off the Republican Army observers when we don't
even know the positions of our fellow soldiers. After all, we're a rear guard that is
jutting—or rather, charging—into enemy territory.
Once the entire theater gets involved and large-scale maneuvers begin, concealing
ourselves will become important. Although we're withdrawing under cover of night,
regardless of how it would go with a division, doing it with an army group is a different
story.
As highly mobile and responsive as my group of excellent mages is, we're not a big
enough force to cover the entire Rhine area.
And with one somewhat undermanned augmented battalion, the normal methods
would be impossible.
Which is why we have this deceptive plan to convince the enemy that we're planning
an offensive using a reconnaissance-in-force mission. The General Staff concluded that
it wouldn't be possible to hide the activation of the rail network that would accompany
the large-scale maneuver in the theater, so instead they deliberately spread false
information about it: "The Empire is moving supplies and troops in preparation for a
major offensive."
If I hadn't heard about it when I met with General von Zettour in the capital, I would
have believed it myself, they put so much effort into the story.
In the capital, a public relations officer made reference to a "large-scale operation,"
albeit in unofficial settings.
There were rumors of "a major operation on the Rhine lines."
And there were the supplies bustling back and forth by rail. It's a huge, tricky retreat
designed to draw the enemy out and destroy them. We'll need a ton of mate riel. And reports on Arene are being thoroughly censored.
Thanks to that, we've convinced even most of the informed people that the movement
on the imperial side is reinforcements for the suppression of the revolt in Arene. The
Empire admits, blushing, that it has failed to quell the situation. The parts of the story
that couldn't be blocked with a strict gag order have been turned into rumors that
control had been achieved to keep up appearances. The tight plan tricks people into
believing the opposite of what's true.
We don't have enough data to guess how the Republic is taking it, but people have a
tendency to believe what they want to believe, so I think we can expect some results.
Even so, they're probably suspicious that the Empire, which supposedly has supply
line issues, is launching a desperate all-out offensive. But I can't believe we actually
fooled them, even if they are suspicious.
The trick worked brilliantly, and it seems the Republic was even on guard against our
desperate offensive. The Imperial Army's most elite mages have performed a reconin-force on an unprecedentedly deep level and met with formidable Republican Army
interception, just like the Empire wanted.
Thus, Tanya and her battalion, reflecting the desperate Imperial Army's impatience,
must pull off this deceptive recon-in-force mission with no regard for casualties.
And the report that the Republican Army is on guard against deep penetration by a
recon-in-force unit was music to the Imperial Army General Staffers' ears. They bought
it, they all think, relieved by the good news. Now the retreating units don't have to
worry about getting their butts kicked.
But though she may be a staff officer, Tanya is in a fight for her life on the battlefield
and thinking about awful things like a smile on Being X's face.
In order to keep the enemy from finding out it's a ruse, the battalion is forced to carry
out this recon-in-force mission without regard for sacrifices.
The 203rd Aerial Mage Battalion is spread out along the front acting as a decoy and
rear guard so the enemy doesn't realize the army is retreating.
Behind us, they're probably doing their best to move the clunky field guns to the rear.
Once that phase is over, the infantry will withdraw. The field engineers have already laid traps. We can expect the move to be finished within the next few hours. Hence, my
unit is stuck getting shot up like this while we buy that time.
The object of the recon-in-force fishing so frequently performed on this front is to find
out about the enemy's defensive preparations and positions of their forces. Since both
sides see recon as a sign of a major impending offensive, the receiving end would
prioritize concealing their troops and not move their reserve forces around in an
aggressive way.
If that would buy the retreating Imperial Army the time they needed, then Tanya and
her battalion had to go in. That's what the orders told them to do.
Of course, in order to prevent us from gathering intelligence, the Republican Army
gives us an enthusiastic welcome with dense anti–air fire. Plus, since we're facing an
interception from a base so far back, our rate of safe returns isn't going to be very high.
In fact, the yardstick for whether it's actually recon-in-force or not is how many
casualties the attacking team suffers.
"Fairy 08 to 01. I'm hit. Going to fall back."
It isn't uncommon for the guy flying next to me to be put out of commission. As for the
efficiency of their interception alone, though, as long we have their radar whited out,
there's no way they can use disciplined fire.
Conversely, with skilled radar observers guiding the fire, they probably would have
been able to intercept more effectively.
But the Republican Army, which tends to rely on radar observer fire and mages'
disciplined fire, is horrible at visual combat.
The main reason we're still taking damage is the sheer amount of iron they're
throwing at us.
You can connect even with lousily aimed shots if you fire enough of them. It's just
terrible.
…Seeing this extravagance, I realize I should have bought stocks in ammunition
companies. I can't regret this oversight enough.
While they are consumables that cost little individually and therefore aren't very profitable, if they're getting squandered like this, the manufacturers must be doing
gangbusters. I had been putting my salary into natural resources, thinking the profits
on munitions would tend to be kept low, but maybe that was a mistake.
"01, roger. 06, 09, cover him. I'm gonna take two shots, so fall back during that time."
What is done cannot be undone. As I reconsider the conclusion I reached back then, I
need to apply what I learn to the future.
Here it is, my constructive orientation toward the future. It's important to always have
a positive attitude.
Anyhow, right now I need to fill in the hole left by my injured man. That's only a matter
of course, but it's better if I can avoid danger. Then is not covering him because I fear
danger the right thing to do? The answer, unfortunately, is no.
Amateurs tend to be scared of any danger they can see. They worry that if they do
anything, something terrifying will happen, so they freeze up.
So an amateur frets that they'll give their position away if they shoot. Certainly, they
may be right to perceive some danger there. But it's still only an amateur's thinking.
Doing nothing means losing an opportunity to do something.
What humans should fear the most is forfeiting profit. If I offer the retreating man an
escort in this situation, I attach two of my subordinates to him as support. So we have
a cluster of three people. If I fire two supporting shots, the sky is still full of smoke
from bursting shells and searchlights. I doubt anyone will notice a couple of shots in
the middle of all that.
If anything, I can expect that the two supporters will get a great reaction as decoys. In
other words, while they're withdrawing, they'll monopolize the enemy's attention. If
by taking a slight risk I can steer clear of danger, then naturally, that is the rational
choice. And they do have the chance of falling back to a safe area, so in game theory
terms, it's not too bad. It's not zero-sum, after all.
Best of all, if I send out decoys under the pretext of providing support for a retreating
soldier, I can pursue my personal profit while caring about my subordinates. The
chances that the idiot who got hit will be saved increase. This is it: a win-win scenario.
"Commander, it's too dangerous."
Of course, my men are pros, so they recognize the danger. They don't want to be
decoys. That's dangerous. I understand very well why they want to protest.
"We have no choice. There's no time. Do it."
But oh, how sad. No, for me, I should probably say it's happy. This is the army, and I'm
the superior officer leading my troops.
Of course, when she remembers that the whole reason she's stuck here suffering in
the first place is because this is the army, she's sorry. In the capital, her superior officer,
General von Zettour, gave her strict orders in writing to operate under the direct
command of General von Rudersdorf.
The orders had come down the official route in the proper format. In other words,
since I have orders from General von Rudersdorf, I have no choice but to accept them
and be the rear guard here. This world is quite easy to understand.
"It's an intense mission, but I know you can handle it"?
"The higher-ups have extremely high expectations of you"?
I'm sure no one can euphemize forcibly sealing lips so well as him. Since I couldn't get
him to listen to my objections, it must be that. It could be a misunderstanding, but it's
best to be a pessimist and prepare for the worst.
So once I'm prepared like a pessimist, I'll be an optimist. Ideally, I'd like to build a winwin relationship with the General Staff. I don't think I have a bad reputation as a staff
officer in the first place.
Then there's a fairly good chance that I've been sent here out of military necessity.
Thinking that, a slight grin appears on Tanya's face. Yeah, maybe I've been worrying too
much.
Surely it must just be that my superiors want to break out of this war situation. I want
to work with both major generals again as soon as the opportunity presents itself. If
possible, I'd like a chance to chat with them. Of course, first I have to get out of this.
The future is important, but right now, surviving is even more crucial.
I quickly load an interference formula from my computation orb into a rifle bullet. I
deploy a defensive shell in front of my troops to shield them from the disproportionate
shots flying up at us.
By interrupting the line of fire, I give them temporary safety. Put another way, even
the Republican numbskulls can tell I've used an interference formula to manifest some
sort of wall that is blocking their shots. Naturally, they'll realize there is something
behind it.
At that point, most of the hail of bullets will be aimed that way.
"01 to 06 and 09. Get a move on. That won't hold for long."
Anyhow, if the decoys move too slowly, they won't last very long, either, but I need to
keep the enemy's eyes on something besides me.
Hurry, hurry, hurry!
"Roger, good luck."
"Yeah…may the Lord protect you."
Irritatingly, instead of "may your luck be everlasting" or something like that, I say some
incomprehensible nonsense about the Lord's protection. I want to cry, but without the
Elinium Type 95, my protective film would be blown away in an instant, and I'd be
destroyed, defensive shell and all.
In a way, Being X is like consumer finance. I don't want to borrow, and I shouldn't, but
I have to. Ahh, eat shit.
The only weapons that can intercept us at eight thousand feet are anti–air cannons,
but if I get hit with one of those, it won't end well.
"CP to Fairy. Report on casualties and status."
"Fairy 01 to CP. Half of us have already dropped out. So far, we've achieved half of our
scheduled numbers. Been looking for that Republican Army ammo dump but can't find
it."
Thanks to that, even my battalion of tough mages is losing lots of men. No one has died, but there are probably more than a few who will never return to the lines. I'm
glad I was honest about the "constant danger" when I was recruiting.
If I was accused of false advertising, I would have betrayed the first principle of sales
born of the modern era: honesty. I'm not such a halfwit that I think I can fool the
market by shouting about "mislabeling." A lack of faith in a trust economy is terrifying,
just terrifying.
Sheesh, I guess I should be breathing a sigh of relief. Or should I lament that just
because we blew up the factory in Dacia everyone's gone off and convinced themselves
that if anyone can blow up an enemy ammo dump, the 203rd Aerial Mage Battalion
can?
"CP, roger. 01, got some bad news for you."
It's not as if I believe in luck, but I recall that my forerunners emphasized it as a factor.
Apparently, when the great Matsusheeta25 hired people, he asked whether they were
lucky or not. Before I was inhumanely sent to this insane world, I didn't understand it.
But now I do. It may only be a question of probability theory, but luck is worth
researching.
"What is it?"
"A battalion-sized group of mages is rapidly approaching the Rhine lines from the edge
of our radar range. Hold them off until the end of phase three."
"…Fairy 01, roger. Transitioning to interdiction combat. Anything else?" Suppressing
the rage welling up inside me, I just barely maintain a businesslike tone. They say it so
simply.
I may say interdiction combat, but we're essentially the strength of two companies
performing recon-in-force. We're not in close formation. On top of that, just passing
through defended positions takes a lot out of us.
In contrast, the intercepting side is full of energy. The air we're flying above the firing
positions is their home turf, so as long as they don't get hit accidentally, they don't
have to worry about that.
It has to be much easier on their nerves.
We may be a band of elites, but I doubt our opponents are the type to unthinkingly say
"yes, sir" when ordered to intercept us.
After all, they're a battalion scrambled from the surface to obstruct our recon mission.
It goes without saying that they're a select team. I don't want to kill myself by wishfully
hoping the enemies are numbskulls. The only way to survive is to prepare like a
pessimist.
"You have permission to immediately abort your recon-in-force mission."
And then, hmm, that's an interesting thing to have permission to do.
It's a fact that permission to abort a mission like this isn't given very often. Certainly,
now that we have interdiction combat orders, if the retreat is going according to
schedule, aborting this mission would be one way to limit further losses.
So it seems rational for the brass to allow it. But think about it. I definitely won't fall
back. Or rather, a little thinking tells me military practicality is a trap.
If someone offers you a paved road straight to hell, even with good intentions, it's
much safer to veer off and drive across the wasteland.
"…I hope that won't be necessary."
I'm not an amateur. As an economically minded person who values rational thought, I
didn't go through training for no reason. I wasn't built to the specifications of some
impractical entity like Being X. I can swear it on the honor of the intelligent winners
of evolution who survived as the fittest, Homo sapiens.
"What? What do you mean?"
"The point of recon-in-force is a survey of the enemy's interception capabilities. If we
abort now, we risk revealing the deceptive purpose of the mission."
If the recon-in-force ruse to mask the withdrawal fails, the rear guard will have to hold
out and buy time till the very end. If we fail to buy time, that's it. What is now an
orderly retreat of ground troops will descend into chaos, and they could be trampled.
For that reason, we should hesitate to even transmit this sort of conversation, even if it is encoded.
Tanya's only choice is to have them move the retreat along as quickly as possible. The
side giving the orders will probably order the rear guard to buy time even if they have
to get literally wiped out doing it. If I were on the side giving the orders, I wouldn't
hesitate to do it that way, either. It's logical. If there's a problem with this plan, it's that
I'm on the receiving side. Fucking hell.
Either way, evading this battalion only to be pursued by every Republican unit on the
Rhine front would be way stupider.
In other words, considering the risk, staying here is all we can do. I'm not the kind of
person who doesn't know the folly of not investing because you're scared of a tiny risk.
What matters most is the returns.
"Since we can't have them finding out until phase three is over, the only choice we have
is to take out this intercepting unit and continue our mission."
"…Understood. I'll have them move as fast as they can."
"Thanks. May the Lord protect you."
In the end, I'm relieved that CP is cooperating. Honestly, this is so rough. Now then, in
order to survive, I've got to be brave and do my best not to lose to this abnormal world.
I have no intention of sacrificing myself to an order to keep flying after I can no longer
focus and my will is nearly broken. I'm fighting for my life, and that's it.
"Okay, attention, all hands. We're headed into a counter-mage fight. Let's teach the
fools challenging us a lesson."
Geez. You could have been enjoying a nice break in the rear, but you came to challenge
us? Personally, it's hard for me to praise that attitude because I know that unpaid
overtime doesn't contribute much to labor productivity. Why would you proactively
enter such a pain-in-the-ass battle?
I'm a peace-loving person, so this pains me. Surely there is no one who loves human
beings more than I do. And yet. It's rare to be ordered to kill them so often as I am. As
a rational, thinking person, it would be embarrassing to curse my fate. Still, I sense
some absurdity.
It's almost as if the conceited face of Being X is about to appear in the back of my mind
with all the narcissism of a transcendent existence. Oh God, if you exist, you are surely
a rotten bastard.
Things really don't go how you'd like. I just want to live a quiet life.
Nothing seemed particularly different about that day. Anyone would say so: It was a
normal day. No, it was a normal battlefield.
If anything was out of the ordinary, it was that there were a few military observers
visiting from the Commonwealth to foster friendly relations. But that wasn't enough
to register as a blip when everyone's emotions were so exhausted.
After chatting with the bigwigs over dinner, the visitors were guided by one of our
officers to begin their inspection. For better or worse, it wasn't of interest to the
troops. They were so tired they didn't care, so they banished it from their
consciousness and went to sleep.
At that point, the Third Mage Battalion belonging to the Republican Army's TwentySecond Division was already on its ascent. Whether sleeping on the ground or heading
into the sky, the soldiers were faithful to their duties… To the mages who took off upon
receiving the scramble order, protecting the sound sleep of our fellow soldiers was
part of our job.
The mission was to eliminate the battalion daring to try recon-in-force, and we
anticipated a secondary objective of assisting ground troops. Our biggest problem was
troops not being able to sleep due to harassing sneak attacks, so the importance of the
mission to restore tranquility might be difficult for someone who hasn't been on the
front lines to understand.
"Control to all hands. Our guests today are pretty serious. You're going to have your
hands full."
And the words from the combat controller, though somewhat grave, were overflowing
with the confidence that things would work out somehow. If a division or regiment of
mages had forced their way through or infiltrated to attack, it might have been
different, but repelling a battalion doing reconnaissance-in-force wouldn't be so hard.
After all, despite the "in-force" tacked on, it's essentially "reconnaissance." They would
probably withdraw upon making contact. Well, I genuinely had to hand it to the guys charging in that day, though—they were really going for it. It takes a lot of
determination to get as far as they did. And judging from the size of the unit, they'd
make quite a racket with harassing attacks, so we had to stay vigilant… Numbers is a
problem in any era.
"Control, who are the invaders?"
"An augmented battalion. They're already past the third defensive line. It's only a
matter of time till they break through the fourth."
Usually a recon-in-force mission would sniff around the first or second defensive line
positions and fall back. At an attack position, they could expect support, and from the
second defensive line, it was still fairly easy to get back to their base. If that was how
it went, it would have a limited effect on the front lines, since they were prepared.
More than anything, it wasn't something that warranted waking up the officers
sleeping in the rear.
If we woke up the whole army for every little scuffle with these frequent recon
missions done expressly as a feint or to distract us, that would be playing right into
their hands.
Everyone just hoped we could get enemy engagements done quietly. The little fights
between recon-in-force units and our interceptors happened so often they were
facetiously treated as part of the nighttime scenery.
"They're too fast. What are the guys on the defensive lines doing?"
Maybe that's why we hesitated at this enemy coming in so rapidly. It went without
saying that they had to be a pretty enthusiastic unit if they were already past the third
defensive line. There was a good chance they had located our shelters and frontline
command.
There were rumors of a desperate imperial offensive.
I was suspicious, but…unless the enemy was awfully determined, they wouldn't
usually be able to get past the third defensive lines. What's more, usually once the
second line is passed, the standby unit is scrambled. We only received sortie orders
after the third line was breached, and it was fair to call that an unbelievably slow
response.
"Widespread magic jamming has paralyzed our scouting network, so our response is
pretty delayed."
And of course, the controller's voice reflected the frustrating state of affairs—how
could it not? The situation was unclear; we were a bit miffed at the urgent order to
intercept after being told repeatedly to stand by.
I can't believe we're stuck having to stop them before they pass the last defensive line.
We risk damage from harassing attacks as well as them taking home intelligence.
Inevitably, this state of affairs had everyone feeling ashamed.
A battalion of mages may have breached the lines, but the Rhine general headquarters
should have been able to crush them easily. Considering the intelligence they had,
though, this was liable to end in disaster.
I was sure a few high-ranking officers' heads would roll because the response to the
widespread magic jamming was delayed. The radio operators would surely be
crawling around unrolling cable to strengthen our communications. And I bet it would
be our job to cover them.
"And apparently the anti–air fire is stuck relying on optical instruments, so watch
out—the enemy force might be doing just fine."
"Roger. Don't want to underestimate an injured beast. Do you have more information
about them? Whatever you know is fine. Got anything?"
Anyhow, the future is the future. Today is today's mission. And it was going to be more
intense than the usual missions. Everyone realized for the first time how worrisome
the situation was.
And we were shocked. Unlike when we repel exhausted enemy mages, this time it was
possible we'd be up against a force that had been able to conserve their energy to a
relative degree. The irritating veil of night made the situation we were facing even
more difficult.
Since our anti–air gunners were relying on optical instruments, we would have to
worry about friendly fire, too. Considering how confusing it could be to tell friend from
foe, it wasn't unthinkable.
"Due to the awful jamming, we haven't managed to identify them, but our superior says they seem like elites. There's also the rumors of a large-scale imperial offensive.
Stay on your guard!"
"I appreciate the advice. Troops, game faces on and let's go!"
Our commander's encouraging voice tells us to prepare for the challenge. The
determination and spirit we could hear indicated the appropriate amount of
nervousness for a vigilant warrior.
But that's only in hindsight.
They were wrong. We didn't need game faces. What we needed was to be crazy enough
about death to find a way to live through it.
"All hands, this is your battalion commander. We've located the enemy. Prepare to
engage."
Both sides' fields of vision were narrower due to the dark, which gave us trouble.
We discovered each other nearly simultaneously. The battalion commanders engaged
at about the same time, too. It was simple. Republican mage doctrine is to work as a
group and overwhelm the individual strength of imperial mages using organized
combat and disciplined fire.
It was basically an unexpected encounter battle in an area approached by the enemy.
Plus, the powerful jamming caused by high mana density.
Even a conservative estimate would say this battle would be something we're not used
to. And our opponents were a unit composed of veteran mages with a wealth of
experience and a talent for close-quarters fighting.
There was no way a normal unit could take the brunt of this assault honed in Dacia
and Norden.
If the vanguard had held out just a little longer, maybe the rear guard could have gotten
away. Or if there had been just a few more mages in the rear guard, the unexpected
shots could have stopped the enemy's approach so the vanguard could get away.
But everything fell just a bit short. The results were disastrous. The shock caused
confusion. A storm of formula bullets from a submachine gun heightened it.
Things deteriorated—we'd been had, and there was no way to stop the blood or the
damage.
The explosion formula, loosed by the imperial mage commander at the helm, opened
a huge hole in the vanguard. At the same time the breach appeared, multiple optical
shot formulas were aimed to crush commanders of each company, and just like that,
the Republican command chain's head was lopped off.
But Republican troops could still, if only barely, resist in an organized way. The rear
guard began using suppressive fire; they knew they had to cover the gap in the
vanguard.
For a short time, the rear guard managed to cover for the vanguard to plug up that
hole. They had enough energy to attempt to reorganize their force. Their vigorous
resistance succeeded in keeping the attack at bay, but as a result, they couldn't give
the vanguard covering fire. They used their full strength preventing the enemy
approach, but then had no energy left to protect the vanguard.
When furious resistance interrupted the imperial charge, the mages suddenly
switched targets to the isolated Republicans out front.
It was around two companies of imperial mages versus the two companies of the
Republican vanguard. But the latter had been completely stripped of its leadership, so
it didn't even have support; in that cut-off state, the Republican mages were isolated
sitting ducks.
As a result, the numerical balance between the two sides flipped. The rear guard had
its hands full defending itself when the vanguard's fate was decided with a swift
incision. Normally, the imperial mages were prevented from approaching by the
Republican Army's obnoxious disciplined fire. Meanwhile, after their supporting
volley, the Republicans would be able to stop the remnants of the enemy from
breaking through. This time, when the two sides met, however, the imperial mages got
to release their pent-up anger and cut the Republicans down.
"Attention, Fairy Battalion. Engage in pursuit."
The rest happened too easily. By the time the rear guard suddenly tried to retreat after
losing its shield, it was too late.
The Republicans didn't have enough distance or speed to shake off the imperial mages, who had accelerated for the attack.
Their race to escape the theater wasn't to be. Ultimately, the Third Mage Battalion of
the Republican Army's Twenty-Second Division was pronounced annihilated.
Ironically, the only survivors were a few downed in the initial explosion formula who
narrowly escaped death.
The Republican Army ended up mobilizing the Rhine general headquarters' select
mage battalion, but they failed to locate the invaders. On the contrary, they let them
burn several supply depots. At that point, the Republican Army Command shifted its
full attention entirely onto the invading battalion.
Rumors of a major offensive. Whispers of the fate of Arene.
They fought bravely to the last man.
The stirring echoes of propaganda convinced the Republic that the people had
sacrificed themselves and met a tragic end. We can't let their deaths be in vain.
The distress of the Imperial Army and the cornered supply lines were simple enough
for the Empire to fix, but the blow still stung. So it didn't hesitate to choose military
maneuvers as the way to break out of that horrible situation.
To secure the front, to secure the Empire.
But that's exactly why people of both nations thought…We're so sick of this. So the
Empire was at wits' end over its unreliable supply lines, and the Republic saw them as
hope.
Little birds were twittering about the movements of the Imperial Army, and the same
thing was on everyone's minds: The Empire is not okay with the current situation. And
it was the absolute truth. The Imperial Army General Staff had realized that if they
focused on beating the bothersome partisans while relying on a limping rail system
for supplies, maintaining an aimless front wasn't worth it.
That objective reality fueled the Republic's misunderstanding. Everyone firmly
believed that the Empire's powerful military organization solved problems through
major offensives, like it did in Dacia, like it did in Norden.
And apart from the delaying at the beginning of the war, the Empire had always
defended its territory to the end. Yes, its territory.
Nobody would withdraw from their own territory. That was the one-sided belief the
Republicans had. But to the officers of the Republican Army who paid for a sliver of
land with blood, it was self-evident truth. They were proud of defending their home
with mountains of dead, so they wondered, Who would part with their fatherland?
And that was why they ended up misreading the Imperial Army General Staff war
machine's intentions so completely it was ridiculous. Perhaps you could say the
Republican soldiers got trapped in their own emotions.
That day, as a result, the Imperial Army succeeded in abandoning the front without
the Republican Army noticing.
Now then, it's about time to talk about the seed of the Empire's victory.
It all started with the reality of conducting recon-in-force of heavily guarded positions.
The dilemma was serious: high casualties versus tactical necessity.
The fact that estimates said even the Devil of the Rhine and her elite troops would lose
at least half their numbers should speak to the danger of it.
Command and staff officers all understood and struggled with the dilemma that
despite that premise, there was an urgent military need for recon-in-force.
An augmented battalion performing recon-in-force created too many casualties, but
any fewer soldiers and they wouldn't be able to achieve their objective.
Facing this dilemma, the Imperial Army requested its Technical Arsenal to research a
new weapon that would enable penetration into heavily guarded enemy positions and
for some degree of reconnaissance. The engineers tentatively suggested a few
technical solutions to the problem, and the one that seemed promising was from
Aerial Technical Arsenal. They proposed developing a high-altitude recon unit to fly
outside the range of anti–air fire. The aerial units that had teams for special recon
missions were superior to begin with.
To the other departments, however, regardless of the latent potential in aerial
reconnaissance, there was one cause for concern: Was it actually possible to achieve
with their current level of technology? It may have been easy enough to talk about increasing the altitude, but the technical demands of an aircraft that could fly at high
altitude presented a lot of hurdles, and they weren't sure they could handle it.
That was the moment Chief Engineer Adelheid von Schugel suggested a methodology
and approach from the magic point of view.
"…What about a special apparatus for additional acceleration during recon-in-force?"
What the heck is that?
The answer to the question that came into everyone's minds when they saw the
outline of the problem was simple, in a way.
Reconnaissance-in-force requires penetrating the enemy's interception lines. So if one
assumes an assault to perform a quick strike and pull out, sending a fast, heavily
armed unit would be best.
So all they needed to do was rapidly accelerate past the enemy positions before they
could intercept. According to Schugel, putting the mages in additional acceleration
apparatuses would solve everything.
By doing that, they would be able to measure the enemy defenses and interception
ability, so everything would work out for the recon-in-force mission as well.
The argument that they would be able to achieve their aims to some degree using
mages for recon-in-force was correct. That was why foot soldiers or mages were used
more often than aircraft.
But casualties had exceeded the permissible limit. That's why the army had asked the
Technical Arsenal for its opinion. This was the conclusion.
"All right. Have the mages charge at high speed."
Aha, certainly if you change your point of view, all you need to do is increase the
breakthrough success rate of the mages. So it was true that having them do it at high
speed would get the job done. The only problem was that there weren't any mages
who could operate at such speeds and altitudes.
The one who offered this solution and wondered how to make it possible was one
genius, Adelheid von Schugel.
His answer? Add speed and altitude with an external apparatus.
The criticism that his idea wasn't much different from the Aerial Technical Arsenal's
only went so far. After all, altitude was a by-product in his plan, which essentially
focused only on speed.
Hence, "additional acceleration apparatus."
But rather than speak of his genius, it's probably easier to take a look at his plan.
The apparatus would be equipped with an abundance of extra-large hydrazine fuel
boosters. Of all the ways to secure stable flight, he used multiple single-use boosters.
And once empty, they would detach along with their external fuel tank, resulting in an
even higher speed near the end of the journey.
On top of that, he gave up on the biggest technical obstacle, regulating the boosters.
With great decisiveness, he conquered the hurdle by deciding the thing would simply
continue on accelerating. Yes, they would just launch it on a straight path. To put it
another way, while it was operating, the mage wouldn't be able to adjust the speed at
all.
The apparatus would come with a tank of boron additive for accelerating in enemy
sky, but that was different. The boron additive, estimated to be ten times as poisonous
as potassium cyanide, was for emergency evasion.
To address the feared shock waves and sudden increase in wave drag, all aeroelasticity
issues would be left up to the mage's protective film and defensive shell.
(The plan was judged to be possible only with unrestrained booster consumption;
aircraft definitely wouldn't work.)
With an unbelievable supersonic target speed, Mach 1.5, they would be able to leave
anything in the dust.
And from a purely engineering perspective, it would be easier to realize than a new
reconnaissance aircraft. More importantly, it was expected to be ready for actual
combat soon.
To add one final comment, however: Due to the single-use nature of its boosters, the
additional acceleration apparatus could fly only in a straight line.
After breaking through the enemy position, mages were required to return to base
under their own steam. No matter how you looked at it, the thing was a one-way ticket
to hell. There's no point in reconnaissance if you can't get back after you go and see.
Even if it's technically practical, a thing isn't fit for practical use unless it can be used,
right? In a way, you would expect people to voice that concern, but when the whispers
started…
An officer from an airborne unit murmured an idea that sounded like it came from
another dimension.
"Then what about sending a 'unit' to the rear of an enemy position?" he asked.
Certainly, it was incredibly dangerous to individuals. It would be nearly impossible to
return. Aha, an additional acceleration apparatus that couldn't return to base was
defective as a reconnaissance vehicle. But why limit its use to reconnaissance? It
would be a more reliable way of delivering mages behind enemy lines than
paradropping.
And it would get them past any intercepting enemies. After all, simply launching the
thing would send it way higher than a practical altitude for anti–air fire. Depending on
how it was used, the army could even anticipate sending a company of mages directly
to the enemy headquarters to decapitate their operation.
At that point, Major General von Zettour from General Staff Service Corps went to visit.
The research itself continued under Chief Engineer Schugel, but the General Staff
requested fairly detailed progress reports.
And when they understood the value of it, they were overjoyed. The guerrilla warfare
proponents were especially ecstatic supporters, and they took steps to prioritize
proceeding with the plan. The project received literal leverage from the General Staff.
With that assistance, a prototype was completed just before the partisans temporarily
took over Arene.
And it just so happened that the Elinium Arms Type 97 Assault Computation Orb was
able to make the critical defense shell and protective film.
According to the test personnel who participated in the experiments, the assault orb
functioned exactly as they had hoped.
Since a measure of reliability had been guaranteed, a first run of twenty mass
production models was rolled out in a hurry.
With that success, the General Staff made a slight but significant amendment to their
decisive battle plan. It was great news for Major General von Rudersdorf's strategy to
lure the Republican Army in and destroy them. The apparatus Zettour had spotted
while it was in development in Tech Research was written into the plan. They were
both thrilled. They would achieve what was, in a way, the dream of all General Staff
officers.
Schrecken und Ehrfurcht.
The first phase of the operation named "Shock and Awe" was simple.
"Attack the enemy headquarters directly to cause the collapse of their line."
That was it.
-x-X-x-
MAY 18, UNIFIED YEAR 1925, THE SECOND DEFENSIVE LINE ON THE RHINE
-x-X-x-
It was a clear, cold night. In the Imperial Army's 203rd Aerial Mage Battalion, Second
Lieutenant Warren Grantz was on guard in a wool-lined field overcoat. It was a quieter
night than they'd had in quite a while. Yes, a quiet night. A peaceful time during which
he could sit in a chair on standby sipping the coffee provided as part of his field rations.
The dark hour was rather tranquil. No shells exploding nearby, no warnings to be on
guard against raids. He couldn't even remember the last time they had gone to sleep
without hearing so much as rifle fire. It must have been so long ago.
This calm had come about because the brass carried line consolidation with
extraordinary resolve.
As a result of the successful retreat and reorganization, the Republican Army had
hastily launched an advance into the wide-open vacuum the Imperial Army had left;
apparently, they were too busy with that to bother with the 203rd. Thanks to that,
there was a brief lull on the battlefield. The battalion commander held off any sorties
and told everyone to take a break before she went back to bed, giving the exhausted
soldiers a much-needed rest.
And so fortunately, perhaps it could be said, the troops were able to spend a night free
of the anxiety induced by the presence of the powerful Commander Degurechaff.
When was the last time that had happened?
Even though these were usually prime hours for nighttime interception missions or
for conducting anti-raid patrols, everything was safe and sound.
Despite knowing they were secure in a rear base, maybe they should have been a little
more nervous about surprise attacks under cover of darkness. Of course, it wasn't as
if the unit had grown lax.
Even if they were so worn out they could sleep anywhere, including the mud, they
could still respond to urgent orders at the drop of a hat.
Still, they relaxed a mite.
The reason was clear.
The majority of the Republican Army had advanced into the void and basically forgot
about the 203rd's defensive position.
The moment the Republican Army emerged from its heavily fortified lines, their
soldiers zealously devoted themselves to expanding the army's gains.
At this point, they would surely rather move into an abandoned area and advance the
front rather than expend blood and iron fighting over a well-defended trench line.
Which explained the rare peaceful night.
Naturally, there wasn't zero concern about pulling the front back. But their
commander had made a confident declaration. "Tomorrow, we'll be the tip of the spear
that will end this war." It could have only meant the unit was gearing up for a serious
attack.
Still, though, the thought that they could end the war made things easier. If our
commander has so much faith in the plan, then even if we don't completely destroy the
Republican Army, it should still be enough to ensure the Empire's safety.
And after that, we can focus on rebuilding the territories ravaged by the war.
…As Grantz reflected fighting so fierce that thoughts of the future were impossible, he
received some concerned looks from his comrades-in-arms.
Once he thought about it more closely, it felt like he hadn't paid attention to his
surroundings in quite some time. Not that it had actually been that long, but still. He
couldn't believe he had so much quiet time; it was more than enough to reflect on the
harsher fighting he'd been through.
To calm his nerves, he picked up his cup of now slightly tepid coffee. Up until that
moment, he'd just been drinking it without paying attention, but the beans were
actually pretty good. He'd been told it was ration, but the presence of beans at all was
rare. Considering the scarcity of boiled water on the battlefield, coffee was quite a
luxury.
Since he was on duty, alcohol was obviously prohibited. He was thankful that they had
a good supply of the coffee their commander liked.
It seemed they had requisitioned a ton of it. It was great that when he wanted to have
a good think over a cup, he could do it without resorting to ersatz coffee. Yes, now that
he considered them, Grantz noticed even the smallest details.
I must really be calm, he mused behind a wry smile… The battalion had been
reorganized due to the wear and tear from repeated battles. Though their losses were
low, it was impossible to get away without a few at least, so even the 203rd Aerial
Mage Battalion had taken on replacements and absorbed part of another unit. And in
fact, Grantz and others like him were originally incorporated as provisional
replacements.
They'd basically been added upon completion of their training. Surely that was better
than being transferred from the familiar unit they'd trained with to struggle in a new
one. Anyhow, the unit based on the 203rd was now known as the Imperial Army's
203rd Provisional Composite Battalion on paper.
Their call sign was Fairy. Pixies, fairies, not much difference really. Basically, this was
just a formality. Eventually, the personnel would be transferred on paper to the 203rd
Aerial Mage Battalion and the "provisional" part of the name would go away.
Thinking along those lines, Grantz could work out the implications of a temporary
reorganization for himself. The higher-ups would do the real transformation after the upcoming operation.
Mulling over all this, he quietly sipped his coffee. It was an unbelievably calm night for
a battlefield. The view from the trench showed him the same sky he gazed at every
night, but for some reason during these quiet moments, it looked surprisingly starry.
For someone used to the battlefield, the distinct lack of machine guns and nighttime
harassing fire was actually so out of place that it was nerve-racking.
"…Relax, Lieutenant. You're acting strange."
But he if he got too worked up, others were bound to notice. Agh. I was just thinking
how I can finally get some sleep even on the Rhine lines with its storms of steel. I still have
a ways to go. Do I seem like a chick with eggshell on its head to everyone else?
"Sorry, Lieutenant Weiss."
It was First Lieutenant Weiss, who had been hit and injured in Arene. The whole
battalion was glad to hear news of his smooth recovery and finally welcomed him back
the other day. Lieutenant Weiss was the sort of guy who looked out for the whole unit
in one way or another—everyone felt more shored up when he was around.
And even though Grantz was the only officer who really needed to be on duty, Weiss
was helping out in an effort to regain his combat instincts after some time away. It
helped relieve a lot of the tension.
The main enemies of a sentry are boredom and nerves. Grantz couldn't have been
more grateful that a senior officer kept them at bay.
"Well, it's not like I don't understand how you feel. I can't calm down, either."
The first lieutenant shrugged. From the casual gesture, Grantz gathered that his
wound was no longer causing him any problems.
The other day, to celebrate his release from the hospital and hone his rusty skills,
Lieutenant Weiss had a mock battle with the commander. Even if that's all he can do
right now…I'm relieved he recovered.
Then Grantz suddenly seized upon one thing Weiss had said. He can't relax, either?
"…So you feel like something is off, too?"
"Of course. This battalion has been on the front lines ever since we mustered." Weiss
smiled bitterly and drained his coffee.
He had been through hard fighting, but the smile on his face was one of amusement.
Why, though?
That question came into his mind for the first time in a while. Compared with everyone
else, Grantz's time on the battlefield had been so short, but it already felt like he'd been
living like this for half his life. Honestly, when he thought about it, the days had been
jam-packed.
"Oh, you don't know, huh?"
Upon seeing Grantz's questioning look, Weiss suddenly seemed to remember. He'd
been thinking that the youngster knew what he was talking about, but it hit him that
he and the other new recruits had only recently reported for duty. He wasn't one of
the grognards from the early days of the battalion.
New arrivals learned the stories of the unit from the senior members. These guys had
been incorporated so hastily that no one had been able to take the time for these
basics. After their baptism in combat and surviving calamitous artillery fire, the
members of the battalion finally had some time to talk to one another.
Actually, this is more or less what we were told during the recruitment process, Weiss
realized and cracked a smile in spite of himself.
"This is a good opportunity. Let's talk about the old days."
We have the time. It's a perfect chance for us to get to know how the other thinks.
Weiss had an orderly bring them more coffee and sat on the desk, looking up as if he
were reminiscing. I didn't realize the first lieutenant could make expressions like that,
Grantz thought suddenly, looking at his senior from the side.
…The Weiss I know is always wearing his first lieutenant mask.
It hit him again that although he had grown used to life in the battalion, his time there hadn't been very long at all.
"Did you know I was originally in the eastern army?"
"No, I never heard that before."
Grantz and the other recruits had come straight out of their accelerated schooling. In
fact, they graduated early and were hurled onto the front lines that very minute. He
remembered again how little time there had been.
Under normal circumstances, he would have heard stories about the service of his
seniors as part of getting to know the unit, but this was his first time. Up until this
moment, they'd been gripping their guns so tightly that neither Grantz nor any of the
old guard had noticed.
"Oh right." Weiss nodded and began to recite something with a smile. "We guide him
always, abandon him never, go where there is no path, never yielding, forever on the
battlefield. Everything we do, we do for victory. We seek mages for the worst
battlefields, the smallest rewards; days darkened by a forest of swords and hails of
bullets, and constant danger with no guarantee of survival. To those who return go the
glory and the honor."
Sound familiar? Weiss asked with his eyes. But he could tell without an answer that
Grantz didn't understand.
I don't even need to ask, Weiss thought and continued his story. "That's what we were
told when we volunteered for the 203rd. 'Don't expect to come back alive!'" His wry
smile contained a multitude of emotions. There was regret, a little self-mockery. A
flood of nostalgia. Sentiments that probably all the senior members of the battalion
shared.
"I was younger. I overestimated my ability and stupidly thought I could be a hero.
Mages always overestimate themselves."
"No, Lieutenant. I don't think you—"
"Nah, it's fine. I'm just telling the truth. That's when the major knocked me flat. Our
training was really like being born again."
Kicked around on a snowy mountain where complaints were futile, targeted by artillery, and as if to finish them off, forced to fly so high they could barely breathe.
"I really can't believe I made it through that," he murmured, shuddering at the horrors
of his past.
If the commander called something that nearly gave him two heart attacks "training,"
then training it was. If she called a drill with the artillery that included some live
rounds "practice," all they could do was resign themselves to the truth. Their schooling
was so rigorous that it may very well have been more terrifying than actual combat.
In his position as second-in-command, Weiss was more painfully aware than he
wanted to be that training cost money. Their battalion had already gone through a
scraggly regiment's worth of annual exercise budget. The amount generously spent on
exercises—a rare exception under Major von Degurechaff's command given her
hatred of waste—was considerable.
He had never once wondered what sort of battle she was anticipating. Still, after his
mistake in Dacia and redeeming himself in Norden—all the different combat
experiences he'd had—he finally understood to some extent. What Major von
Degurechaff's vice commander had learned was a simple principle.
By thoroughly training them and then accumulating further instruction in the form of
combat experience, Major von Degurechaff was hardening her battalion into a battleworthy unit step-by-step, attempting to educate them while carrying out missions and
racking up achievements.
In a way, you could say she was trying to whip her hastily formed battalion into elite
shape.
That's why he'd heard her (and wondered at the time if he'd heard wrong) rail against
the idea of allowing a lower standard of discipline due to the addition of new recruits.
In fact, he probably should have been surprised she even took on the assignment of
rearing Grantz and the other newbies. As a result, however, it was fair to say that there
was a reason the commander's philosophy changed from handpicking elites to forcing
cultivation.
Or you could say she had her own form of trust in her superior officer's nose.
Something had invited a change.
Some reason that she needed mages "even just for head count."
That was why Weiss had been looking out for the group newcomers. To his happy
surprise, he got the impression Lieutenant Grantz would make a fine officer.
That was why, even if Major von Degurechaff wasn't grumbling, he wanted to tell the
new recruits how things really were. That was his way of showing kindness.
-x-X-x-
MAY 21, UNIFIED YEAR 1925, IMPERIAL ARMY GENERAL STAFF OFFICE,
DINING ROOM 1 (ARMY)1
-x-X-x-
Major General von Rudersdorf had heard that General Staff Office meals were
prepared with the same budget and ingredients as on the front lines, for the extremely
persuasive reason that it wouldn't do for soldiers back from the battlefield to be
jealous of the food in the rear.
That's what he'd heard, but he wondered, as he washed down a bite of bone-dry KBrot with some water, whether frontline food was perhaps better than what he had
been served. I doubt the food committee that came up with this even tried any for
themselves was his calm impression, dripping with the brand of cynicism particular to
those with plenty of combat experience.
Knowing them, they came at it purely from a nutritional point of view, debated at length,
considered all the details of securing production costs and ingredients. During all that
time, I'm sure not a single person paid any attention to the crucial element of flavor. That
has to be it. He aired his complaint as a sigh, cleansing the lingering crumbs and awful
flavor from his mouth with another drink. Who would think to mass-produce this stuff?
That said, across from him, Zettour had resigned himself to accepting the bread and
ate it with a straight face. Perhaps resignation is the best spice for this, thought
Rudersdorf as he decided to set aside his myriad grievances with the bread.
Their plan was proceeding almost exactly according to schedule. They were perfectly
prepared for their escape forward.
Operation Schrecken und Ehrfurcht ("Shock and Awe") was mere seconds away from
launch.
Ever onward. We have no choice but to advance.
"Are we going to eat in silence? I must be more nervous than I thought."
"Aha, hmm. I can't believe you said that. Nervous? I always thought you, at least, were
a stranger to nerves, Zettour."
"I could say the same. I'm surprised you're nervous."
The pair bantered as they had since their college days.
But…Rudersdorf wasn't averse to admitting he was anxious.
The fate of their fatherland hung on this operation. If the revolving door didn't work
as planned, if they failed to cut off the enemy's head…they would be forced back to
square one.
Still, he thought.
The only way out of this for the Empire is to keep moving ahead.
We must advance.
The only thing they could do was escape forward.
Onward. Onward still.
We'll blaze a trail for the fatherland. We'll smash everything that stands in its way. Oh,
we swear to forge the future of our fatherland.
""Comrades, lead the Empire to victory!""
-x-X-x-
THE SAME DAY, THE RHINE LINES
-x-X-x-
"Major von Degurechaff to all hands. It is now 1700 hours."
At the appointed time of their sealed orders, having synced watches with her adjutant,
Tanya solemnly reports the hour.
"I agree, First Lieutenant Weiss," Tanya's second-in-command attests.
After making sure all the officers present are prepared to log the contents with no
room for misunderstanding, Tanya nods and draws the knife at her hip.
"All right. Let's open it."
She casually slices into the secure package with the dagger and pulls out a sheaf of
documents. Judging from the texture, it's probably the extra-flammable oil paper with
the General Staff's watermark. I can tell from the blurring of the letters that they were
thoughtful enough to use water-based ink. It's fairly exciting.
After flipping through the documents with a practiced eye, I've gotten the gist of it.
…Ultimately, the only move we have is to pierce straight through the front. In this
situation, if we can't force a path to open up, the only alternative is to gather even more
strength and find a way to break through.
Which must have been why the Imperial Army General Staff Service Corps and
Operations Division arrived at such a rather unusual solution.
Even I think escaping forward is our only way out of this.
So…
If there is nothing to do but advance, we have to press forward like crazy with no
thought to stopping.
"Lieutenant Serebryakov, gather the troops. Lieutenant Weiss, give this a look."
Routine exchanges. Tanya sends her adjutant to assemble the battalion, fills her vice
commander in, and prepares for the attack.
Afterward, the brief comment she has for her officers is the same as always.
"Attention, officers. There is only the unflinching advance. Go forward, then press on."
No, stopping won't be allowed.
"This will be an indomitable advance. Anyone who falters won't be permitted to live."
It's our first and last chance. That's why we must get through.
Only onward.
Onward still