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As the rotorwash died down, Harry found himself alone for a moment. Several soldiers dressed in khaki were double-timing his way. The airfield-defense unit. Men and a few women in RAF blue were emerging from the Nissan huts and control tower, under Fitzsimons’s supervision. All of them were carrying old-fashioned rifles.

Harry looked at his watch.

Fourteen minutes.

The battalion had suffered nearly 12 percent casualties before they’d even crossed the Channel. RAF Hurricanes had ripped into them, diving out of the sun and slashing through the tight formation of transports and the gliders they were towing.

Their escorts, a squadron of standard 109s, had finally beaten off the defenders, but not before six Junkers had dropped away, trailing smoke and flame. Colonel Albrechtson tried not to imagine what it would be like, dying in such a fashion.

His men all wore the same expression. Thin lipped, gray faced, but resolute. The fucking SS with their pantomime costumes and superior bullshit—they liked to think of themselves as the elite. But Albrechtson knew that the best soldiers in the world were here in these planes with him. The Fallschirmjäger. Germany’s airborne warriors.

The hollow bass notes of exploding flak reached him through the corrugated metal skin of the JU-52, but it was distant. The entire coastline of southern Britain was ablaze with gunfire. Thousands of planes dueled in the sky, and hundreds of ships pounded away at each other down below. It was a titanic struggle, but for the moment, it was a contest of machines.

In a few minutes he and his men would contend in blood. Their strength and their will against their offspring of this failed, bankrupt empire. Albrechtson didn’t know if he would survive. But he was certain that Germany herself would triumph.

The drone of the engines made it impossible to hear anything but shouts, so there was no point saying any last words to the men. They didn’t need speeches, anyway. All they needed was the jump light. He took a sip of water from his canteen and stroked the wooden stock of his trusty Mauser. It wasn’t as fancy as the new automatic assault rifles issued to the SS, but it had served him well on Crete and in the Ukraine. He was happy to have it along, as an old friend.

He took the last few minutes to inspect his men. They looked magnificent, but he wasn’t so foolish as to imagine that would last. He’d fought the British on Crete. Although that had been a victory, it was a bloodbath, as well. There had been talk that the führer would never allow an airborne assault again, yet here they were. At least a third of these men had jumped into Crete with him, falling amongst the savages of the Maori Battalion and their New Zealand slavers. It had been a slaughter from which normal soldiers would not have recovered.

But his Fallschirmjäger had regrouped after crippling losses, and in the end they had taken the island.

They would take this island, too.

Harry instructed his makeshift platoon to take up positions in a series of slit trenches that offered fire lanes that converged with Fitzsimons’s fire teams on the hill at the end of the runway. He had no illusions about the kind of fire support he could expect from them, but you have to cut the cloth to suit your budget, as his grandfather used to say.

He heard Sergeant St. Clair’s thick East End accent, booming through the speakers of his helmet. “Target lock, guvnor. Confirmed as eight ME One-oh-nines. Five thousand meters out. Launching.”

“Acknowledged,” said Harry before he muted the channel back to his antiair team.

“Listen up,” he called down the trench line. “Escort fighters are coming in. Eight Messerschmitts. They’re about three miles away now, but I want you to watch what happens. Keep watching in the direction of the village.”

The men—they were all men—studied the tree line behind him.

“Cor blimey, wozzat!” cried one of them.

Eight thin tendrils of white exhaust smoke shot up from the hollow and rocketed away.

“Those are Scorpion ground-to-air missiles,” Harry informed them. “They will destroy every Messerschmitt that’s currently heading toward this airfield, hoping to shoot the crapper out of you.”

He watched as their heads turned to track the flight path of the missiles. A few began pointing in excitement. A cluster of small black dots, the fighters, had become visible to the south. The Scorpions ate up the distance to their targets at a phenomenal rate.

Eight balls of fire filled the sky where the aircraft had been.

Lusty shouts of approval arose from the trenches, and Harry was sure he could hear something similar coming from Fitzsimons’s hill. His demo specialists, Bolt and Akerman, dropped into the shelter beside him, having just finished a rush job of mining the runway.

“Whizzbangs are ready, Captain,” Bolt announced.

“We set a few claymores, too. Had ’em for securing the lay-up point in Norway. They’re about halfway out to the runway.”

Another six contrails whooshed away from the village.

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