“Make the dump there. I want you and Fourth Platoon to be my mobile reserve. Stand ready, keep on the radio, and move when I call, clear?”
“Perfectly, Sir.”
The QOCH officer saluted and went to leave.
Ramsey added one other thing.
“The RSM will accompany you, Iain. He can organise and supervise an ammo chain, leaving you free to command the essentials. Take good care of him, will you?”
Aitcherson understood that Robertson was there to watch him, and stand in if he was not up to the job, and Ramsey knew that he knew it. However, the younger man welcomed the support, as much as he welcomed the sensitive way the Black Watch officer had provided it.
Two minutes later, 7th Black Watch was on its way to the rail bridge.
The rain stopped abruptly, the grey gloom almost immediately lost in sunshine.
The colours were magnificent, and men from both sides wondered at the rainbow in all its glory, the end seeming to terminate on the eastern side of the bridge.
However, the combatants did not permit one of nature’s finest displays to restrict the battle, and dozens of men died, or were wounded, under its wondrous arch.
Hässler was under pressure, now the de facto commander of the ad hoc infantry unit called Yorke Force, and he was no longer had time to fire his weapon, his method of destruction being the radio.
His latest messages had called the Yeomanry reserve forward, three Staghound Mk III Armoured cars, and a Comet tank, soon to add their firepower to a growing fight.
Two of the Allies’ 3” anti-tank guns were destroyed in short order, their shells seemingly ineffective against the angled hull armour of the T-34’s, whereas the Soviet HE shells were more than up to the job of subduing the AT defence, allowing the Soviet tanks to move closer all the time.
The ad hoc company was firing at a phenomenal rate, encouraged to expend ammunition, now that more and more targets appeared in the clear autumn morning.
The lead T-34 was on the approach now, moving inexorably towards the bridge, some fifty metres to its front.
A small smoke trail reached out, hit, and the rocket projectile bounced off, failing to explode.
Accompanying Soviet guardsmen hacked down the bazooka crew before they could get off a second shot, a grenade finishing both men off and wrecking the weapon for good measure.
A Staghound swept forward, the odd looking armoured car a hybrid, the lower half all T17 Chevrolet Armoured Car, the upper half, a Crusader III gun turret sporting a six-pounder gun.
The armoured car came apart as two 85mm shells struck simultaneously, both HE, and both possessing sufficient power to utterly destroy the vehicle.
The third T-34 in line stopped abruptly, a large mine, having been narrowly missed by the lead two tanks, claiming its offside track.
Ramsey’s Black Watch arrived just as the Comet deployed and got off its first shot, a solid AP shell, which deflected off the mantlet of the lead Soviet medium tank.
Neville Griffiths had joined the Derbyshire Yeomanry in an age of horses, but armoured warfare had come as second nature to him.
During the advances in 1944-45, he had been credited with no less than seventeen Panzer kills, including three Panthers in one hectic day, the previous February.
Thrice mentioned in dispatches, sporting the Military Medal and Bar, Sergeant Griffiths should have been an officer, except for his quick temper and fists to match.
He had been up and down the NCO ratings more often than, in his own words, ‘a busy whore’s knickers’, and his recent step up to Sergeant had been opposed by Captain ‘Knobber’ Lensh, the squadron adjutant. The officer had once felt Griffiths’ fist on his nose, but now felt nothing at all, as most of him was buried outside of Bremen.
He was sober and angry, a combination that transformed him into an excellent tank commander, and he relocated just before a flurry of rifle grenades landed where the Comet had fired from.
Popping back up, the British tank missed its second shot completely, staying put, and relying on its faster rate of fire to give it the edge.
The 77mm gun spat out a sabot round before the Soviet tank crew had even found the enemy tank.
The fast-moving core penetrated the hull of the tank, precisely at the ball mount of the hull machine gun.
Smaller in diameter than the gun it had been fired from, the projectile was more of a dart, the increased power of penetration pushing it rapidly through everything in its path.
In this instance, it first traversed the machine-gunner before finding the shell in the hands of the loader.
The effect was immediate and catastrophic, the turret and hull parting company in the blink of an eye, as the internal explosion destroyed the tank, one of those recently acquired from the Poles.
Two shells streaked past the retreating Comet, testimony to the fighting spirit of the 4th Guards Tank Brigade.
The battle was getting desperate.
At Rechtern, matters were even worse, the 116th’s infantry having taken heavy casualties, as a result of a Soviet error of judgement.
The support artillery had been accidentally dropped on the defence line, risking the bridge’s integrity, but catching the men exposed, so used were they to the Soviets avoiding strikes on bridges.
For the Red Army assault force, it could not have worked out better. There was no damage to the bridge and dozens of US infantry were out the fight.
Only one serviceable 3” anti-tank gun remained, and it got off one telling shot before it was swept aside by a direct hit, as the T-34’s closed in.
Lieutenant Colonel Willoughby, desperately trying to piece together what was happening to his command, and without decent information from the temporary commander of the 154th Brigade, did all he could, as well as he could.
Orders went to the Adhoc tank unit, seven vehicles of varying types and battle worthiness, sending them down Route 48 to stiffen the defence of Rechtern, the position he saw as most under threat.
With them went one platoon of the Royal Engineers, hanging on tight, as the venerable tanks moved off at speed.
The 3rd Battalion, more of a short company in reality, sent two of its platoons down the river line to bolster the northern edge of Rechtern, removing half the firepower from a point directly opposite the few Soviet engineer inflatables.
His last but one act withdrew half of the mortar support allocated to the rail bridge, sending that south in the wake of the tanks.
By the time that Willoughby had all the information he needed, it was too late, and the rail bridge was left vulnerable.
Willoughby’s final act was to ensure his signals troops screamed for assistance to any Allied unit that had ears, pleading with them to come to Barnstorf, where a disaster was in the making.
Major Ramsey had arrived into a scene from Armageddon itself, the now bright sunlight picking out death and destruction on a grand scale.
Two Staghounds were burning, the survivor manoeuvring as best it could on three wheels, trying to find somewhere safe to lick its wounds.
The US infantry holding the rail bridge were under pressure, two Soviet tanks on the bridge, their turrets sweeping from side to side, scouring the defensive positions, claiming a life here and there, and effectively keeping Allied heads down along the line.
Behind them, Soviet infantry were running, converging on the structure that would get them across the river and onto dry land.
“Quickly lads, quickly.”
Directing a Vickers gun into position, he made sure the crew understood his purpose.