USSR 1941

Chapter 16 Veterans

Suddenly found that there are so many rewards, thank you brothers for your support!

***********

When he returned to the trench, Shulka hadn't recovered from the mental struggle just now. He squatted in the trench in a daze, silently holding the gun in a daze.

"Hey Shulka... Shulka?"

"Oh!" Shulka woke up to Okunev's cry.

"Tell me!" Okunev asked impatiently, "Is there anything good?"

"Oh, yes!" Shulka replied: "I'm the class president!"

"Squad leader? Are you the squad leader?" Okunev's eyes widened, and several Soviet soldiers around him turned their heads and looked in this direction in unison.

"Yes!" Shulka nodded.

"Great!" Okunev stood up immediately, and then stood up and saluted Shulka: "Comrade squad leader, waiting for your order!"

Then Okunev waved to the side again and said, "Hey, did you all hear that? Shulka is our squad leader!"

There was some reluctance on the faces of those soldiers, which may have something to do with Shulka's previous reputation.

Or, they thought that Shulka had just gotten lucky and made a contribution.

Among them was especially the soldier with glasses, with his sunken cheeks and protruding nose like an eagle's beak, on which a pair of glasses as thick as the bottom of a beer bottle rested. Sometimes Shulka wondered how he will be a soldier.

However, a red star on his left breast shows that he is a veteran and has served.

"Sorry, we haven't received the order yet!" The veteran replied coldly.

"Matvey!" Okunev said dissatisfiedly: "What's your attitude? Can you talk about this kind of thing casually, or do you want the major to come and tell you in person?"

"I still say that, Okunev!" Matvey replied: "We have not received orders!"

As he said that, Matvey wiped the rifle in his hand, and Shulka noticed that he could easily put the rifle together without even bowing his head.

At this time, an officer with boots came over and shouted in this direction: "Squad 1, Shulka will be your squad leader from now on!"

Then the officer nodded at Shulka again: "I'll keep an eye on you, Shulka, you'd better let each of them blow up a tank like you did, or they'll kick you to Siberia!"

"Yes, sir!" Shulka replied.

Shulka later learned that this officer who always spoke with a bit of a joke was his immediate superior, the second platoon leader Pukarev.

"Comrade monitor!"

"Comrade monitor!"

...

Several Soviet soldiers came up reluctantly and saluted Shulka one by one.

"Comrade Matvey!" Shulka called to stop the veteran who was about to leave.

"Do you have any orders, Comrade Squad Leader?" Although Matvey answered in his mouth, his eyes were full of disdain, and there was even a bit of joking.

"Your Red Star Medal!" Shulka raised his head towards Matvey's left chest with an envious expression, and asked, "Can you tell me its story?"

Shulka didn't really want to hear the story.

But there is no way, he knows that if he wants these subordinates to be obedient, he must first establish a good relationship with these veterans, because veterans have a certain reputation in the army, they do not need military ranks or positions, soldiers will spontaneously favor them... They have combat experience that no one else has.

Asked by Shulka, Matvey felt a little embarrassed.

"Well, it's nothing, Comrade Squad Leader!" Matvey replied: "It was the Winter War. I discovered the enemy's night attack while I was on guard, and saved our army from losses!" (Note: The Soviet army called it Sufen War for the Winter War)

"Wow,

You fought in the Winter War! " Shulka showed great interest, he moved a little bit to signal Matvey to sit down, and he even called a few soldiers in the squad to form a circle.

"I think we should listen to Comrade Matvey's combat experience!" Shulka said: "Because it is likely to appear on the battlefield in the future, and then this experience will save our lives!"

The soldiers agreed, unbeknownst to them, that Shulka was actually using Matvey to make them obey him.

"It must have been a tough battle, didn't it?" Shulka asked.

"Yes!" Mavit nodded, and after a moment of silence, he recalled: "We thought that the war would end soon, that the Finns would surrender to us in just a few days...but that's not the case. They Instead of fighting us face-to-face, a small group of troops attacked us suddenly when we were not paying attention, and we suffered heavy casualties!"

"That doesn't seem to be the same as the Germans!"

"Of course!" Mavit said. "The Germans are much harder to deal with than the Finns!"

At this point Mavit stopped talking.

Everyone understands what Mavit means: If the Finns have caused heavy casualties to the Soviet army, then the Germans, who are much more difficult to deal with than the Finns...

This hit the weak point hidden in the soldiers' hearts. Everyone was more or less thinking about a question: Can they go back alive?

"Don't worry!" said Okunev. "Tomorrow, tomorrow our troops will come back and get us out! Isn't that right, Shulka?"

"Oh, yes... yes!" Shulka replied: "Tomorrow, until tomorrow!"

This was not the truth, but Shulka was ordered not to tell the truth.

The reason is simple, if the soldiers knew the truth, that the fortress was surrounded and the Germans had reached Slutsk and soon Minsk, and there would be no reinforcements to rescue them, many soldiers would have collapsed.

This is understandable, and at the same time, Shulka also believes that this approach is correct. After all, most of the Soviet troops in the fortress are recruits, and they don't have much psychological endurance at all.

But at the same time, Shulka knows that this is not a long-term solution. If it is delayed day by day, there will always be a day when it will be revealed.

Matvey seemed to read something in Shulka's expression, but he said nothing.

This made Shulka feel relieved, because Matvey is already cooperating with him, which shows that what Shulka just did was not in vain.

As night fell, the surroundings suddenly became quiet. The German army seemed to need a rest after a day of intense attack, so they stopped the attack.

But this does not mean that they will let the fortress go like this.

What will the future hold? Shulka did not know.

He only knew that although Major Gavrilov had interrogated the captives and believed the situation of the fortress... From this aspect, it is imperative to break out of the siege.

However, what Major Gavrilov believes is not important, what matters is the attitude of the instructor.

Tap the screen to use advanced tools Tip: You can use left and right keyboard keys to browse between chapters.

You'll Also Like