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Being on the receiving end of the lesson was an honor Willi could have done without. He nervously looked back over his shoulder. Where were the German panzers to stop this onslaught? They'd always been thin on the ground in this part of the front. The generals had concentrated them on the other wing. It almost worked, too… but almost was a word that got a lot of soldiers killed.

One of the French panzers started spraying machine-gun fire toward the German line. Idiotically, a couple of German MG-34s fired back. Their bullets spanged harmlessly from the panzers' thick iron hide. And, as soon as they showed themselves, other enemy panzers gave them cannon fire till they fell silent. It didn't take long.

Then flame spurted from the first French machine. It stopped short. Hatches flew open. The driver, radioman, and commander bailed out. One of them, his coveralls on fire, dove into a shell hole. The other two got shot before they could find cover. Willi didn't know for sure whether one of his bullets found the panzer crewmen. If not, though, it wasn't for lack of effort.

The German antitank gun knocked out another enemy machine a moment later. Then the surviving French panzers shelled it into silence. On they came, poilus loping along among and behind them. After snapping off a couple of more shots, Willi ducked for cover. He knew what was coming. And it came: a burst of machine-gun bullets cracked past less than a meter above his head.

Then he heard one of the sweetest noises ever. There were German panzers around here after all. One of them fired at the French machines. Clang! That was a hit. Willi thought it came from a 37mm gun, too. He really hadn't known there were any Panzer IIIs in the neighborhood.

Fire from the French panzers paused. They had to traverse their turrets to bear on the new threat. And their commander was also the loader and gunner. They couldn't shoot fast no matter how much they wanted to. The German Panzer I and II suffered from the same problem. Not the III. Commander, loader, and gunner all fit within its angular turret.

Because of that edge, the Panzer III knocked out two more French vehicles in quick succession. Its hull machine gun sprayed death at the advancing foot soldiers and made them sprawl for cover. But then the froggies started shooting back, damn them. Some of their panzers mounted 47mm cannon. The III was armored better than the I and II, but Willi didn't know of a panzer in the world that could stop 47mm AP rounds. The German machine showed smoke, and then flame. Willi hoped some of the crewmen got out.

A few Panzer Is and IIs still tried conclusions with the French armor. Willi could see how that would play out, even if it took a while. He didn't like the ending on the movie that ran in his mind. He didn't like retreating, either, but… He just hoped he could do it without getting shot in the back.

Then Corporal Baatz yelled, "Fall back through Etrepois!" That was the tiny village behind the stretch of line the section was holding. Willi had heard the Frenchies who lived there pronounce the name. Awful Arno made a horrible hash of it.

German artillery came to life then, pounding the ground in front of the line. That would make the poilus take cover if anything did. Trying not to think about short rounds, Willi scrambled out of his hole. He ran hunched-over and zigzagged. Maybe it did a little good, maybe not.

He dove into a crater a 155 round must have dug. A moment later, another Landser joined him. "Boy, this is fun," Wolfgang Storch panted. "Fun like getting all your teeth pulled out."

They'd gone through basic together. They still argued about who hated Awful Arno worse. Wolfgang was more apt to speak his mind than Willi, who usually had a sunnier disposition. But there wasn't anything to be sunny about, not right now there wasn't. "Fun. Yeah. Sure." Those were all the words Dernen had in him.

Storch fired a couple of rounds from his Mauser. "That'll make 'em keep their heads down," he said in some satisfaction. "C'mon. You ready to do some more moving?"

"I guess." Willi hoped he'd find reinforcements rushing up through Etrepois. He didn't. The village was only a few houses and a tavern marking a crossroads. Frenchwomen with impassive faces watched the Germans retreat. A few weeks earlier, their own men had been the ones giving ground.

The Wehrmacht was on the move then. Willi'd had his pecker up. Now… Now he was discovering what the Frenchies had known ever since December, when the German blow fell in the west. If you had the choice between advancing and retreating, advancing was better.

Now there was a profound bit of philosophy! Shaking his head, Willi left Etrepois behind him. AFTER SO LONG on the Ebro front, Madrid was a different world for Chaim Weinberg. It was different for everybody in the Abraham Lincoln Battalion, for everybody in all the International Brigades.

That didn't make the embattled capital of Spain (though the Republican government had been operating out of Barcelona for quite a while now) an improvement over the trenches in the far northeast. Looking at the devastation all around him, Chaim said, "They had to destroy this place in order to save it, didn't they?"

Mike Carroll only grunted. The hand-rolled cigarette in the corner of his mouth twitched. "Fascists destroyed this fuckin' place to destroy it," he answered. "That's what Marshal Sanjurjo's assholes do."

He talked slow, like a foul-mouthed Gary Cooper. He looked a little like him, too: he was tall and fair and lean and rugged. Chaim, short and squat and dark, fit in fine in Spain. People stared at Mike, wondering if he was a German. Better to be thought a Gary Cooper lookalike. No one in Republican Spain loved Germans.

Grimacing, Chaim shook his head. That wasn't true. No one in Republican Spain admitted to loving Germans. That wasn't the same as the other. Just as Republicans had to lie low in land Sanjurjo's Nationalists held, so the jackals of Hitlerism needed to smile and pretend wherever the Republic still ruled. One side's firing squads or the other's took care of fools who slipped. As far as Chaim was concerned, the Nationalists massacred, while the Republic dealt out stern justice. That somebody on the other side might see things differently bothered him not a peseta's worth.

Somebody on the other side wouldn't have seen what the Fascists had done to Madrid. Spanish bombers-and those of their Italian and German allies-had been working the city over for two and a half years. Buildings looked as skeletal and battered as a bare-branched forest at the tag end of a hard winter. Spring would clothe the forest in green. Spring was here in Madrid, but this town still smelled like death. It would be a long time recovering, if it ever did.

Well, that was what the International Brigades were here for. They were the best fighters the Republic had. Chaim would tell people so, at any excuse or none. Few Spaniards seemed to want to argue with him. They knew they had no military skill to speak of. That shamed a lot of them. Maybe it should have made them proud instead-didn't it argue they were more civilized than most?

Many Internationals, including some of the Abe Lincolns, had fought in the last war. Chaim and Mike were both too young for that. But, like the rest of the Marxist-Leninists and fellow travelers who'd come to Spain to battle Fascism, they were motivated. They hadn't stood on the sidelines when reaction went on the march here. They'd come to do something about it.

"Funny, y'know," Chaim said, looking away from a skinny dog snapping at something disgusting in the gutter. "They were set to take us out of the line six months ago, when the big war fired up." He jerked a thumb toward the northeast toward the rest of Europe, the world beyond the Pyrenees.

"Yeah, well…" Mike paused to blow a smoke ring. He owned all kinds of casual, offhand talents like that. "Bastards back there finally figured out we knew what we were doing down here."