âWe must not lose Huntingham. To lose Huntingham is to lose the Husson, which is to give the enemy a conduit. We must send in reinforcements somehow.â
âThe situation of Franceâs central group army is currently good, and there is talk of dividing some of these troops and sending them to the relatively inferior northâ¦â¦â¦â¦.â
âDoes this mean that we will continue our march or stop?â
âWe wonât stop until before the occupation of the city. That is something we will have to figure out later, there are a lot of problems right now!â
âDue to the movement of civilians, the paths of our allies are being obstructed. The movement must be prohibited.â
âThatâs like forcing civilians to build defenses! Thereâll be children!â
The meeting continued non-stop until dawn. After dismissed his staff, Heiner continued to receive
and discussed the plan of action.
At one moment, his vision blurred and then became clear again. Tuk. Two drops of blood fell on the paperwork.
As he carelessly swept his finger under his nose, he found blood. Irritated, Heiner took out a handkerchief and wiped his nose.
He could not remember when was the last time he had a good nightâs sleep. There was no end to the amount of work that had to be done and done again. Like the corpses of soldiers who were constantly being carried on stretchers.
His hand stopped for a moment as he wiped away the drops of blood on the piece of paper. Looking at the bright red blood, the scene of âthat dayâ seemed to replay like a nightmare.
The red water splashing in the bathtub, and the body hanging helplessly like a doll with broken stringsâ¦â¦â¦.(*Annette tried to kill herself in the tub)
Heiner raised his head and looked at the large map on the wall. His gaze stayed on the central front, marked with blue lines, which contained significantly more electric lines than the northern and southern parts of the country.
âHaâ¦â
He let out a low sigh and rubbed his face.
According to the report, Annette did not stay in the hospital but followed the moving procession. But there was a war going on in Huntingham, with a search operation. Safety could not be guaranteed until the end.
He went to the trouble of sending her to the farthest end that he thought was the safest, but the defense lines there were pushed. If she were to be in danger, it would be unbearable.
Danger â-
In retrospect, it was always he himself who put that woman in danger. All of her danger, pain, sadness, and unhappiness came from him.
And they went straight back to him, and in complete defeat, Heiner closed his eyes and buried himself deep in his chair.
He thought he would never lose. But every time he thought that, he was slowly losing.
Heiner slowly let go of the handkerchief he was holding to his nose. His hand was shaking like inertia. He clenched his hand. The handkerchief crumpled with his force.
Everything was over.
She was drifting away. So far away that he could hold on no more.
âBut why am Iâ¦â¦â¦..â
You are still here alone and feel like dead, and I am still thinking about you.
Have I spent all my life on you, so my life ended here, having lost you?
Heiner stared at the round bloodstain on the paper with vacant eyes. His hands slowly stopped shaking. In desolation he asked himself.
âWhat is left for me?â
He counted them one by one, but they were all things that he had never wanted in the slightest. No, it was what he got for the only one thing he had wanted from the beginning.
âIsnât it hard?â (A)
For the only one thing heâd ever wished forâ
âJust everything.â (A)
A faint light returned to his empty eyes. The surroundings gradually became clearer. Then he reached out and grabbed the pen again.
The bleeding eventually stopped. Heiner tossed his handkerchief on the desk and flipped over the document, which still had blood stains on it. He mechanically repeated the act of reading, reviewing, signing, and rereading.
The dried blood stains faded as the document progressed, and by the third or fourth page, they were completely gone. Only the stark letters were inscribed on the white paper.
Heiner moved his pen. Black ink spread across the paper. Along the tip of the pen, his name was inscribed in the signature line.
[Heiner Valdemar.]
The Central Front had to be defended to the death. For the sake of the country where someone would live.
***
By the time Huntinghamâs wounded soldiers and medical personnel had left the city, the enemy forces had seized control of most of the cityâs suburbs in a rapid advance battle.
As the outer defensive line collapsed, the allies retreated to the inner defensive line.
The French Air Force bombed Huntingham indiscriminately. Under 1,300 bombers, Huntingham turned into a sea of fire.
Padania gathered as much manpower as it could mobilize. Military personnel and even civilian volunteers were mobilized to build a defensive line.
Annette joined the rescue operation and went to the outskirts with medical supplies. Since the suburbs were already almost entirely controlled by the enemy, it was inevitable to encounter them.
âWhatâs there!â
The enemy shouted something in French. Annette raised her hands and answered in the clumsy French language.
âI am a nurse.â
âYou â¦â¦ Padania â¦â¦ come hereâ¦â
The French soldier said something, but Annette could only understand a few words. She tried to approach them to hear better.
The French soldier asked Annette many questions. However, seeing that Annette couldnât understand the soldier gestured with his hand, pointing to the military vehicle.
Annette turned her head to where he was pointing. The soldier was lying on a liver gurney beside it.
âYou want me to treat â¦â¦ him?â
âYes!â
Annette nodded hurriedly, then walked towards the injured person. On the way there, she glanced back discreetly.
From the lack of any particular commotion, it seemed that the allies were safely moving on while Annette got the enemyâs attention.
She quietly exhaled in relief as she approached the stretcher. The other person was a boy soldier, he had a young face, perhaps sixteen years old at most.
ââ¦â
âWait a minute.â
Perhaps he had been near an explosion, half of the boy soldierâs body was full of burn marks. His right arm, in particular, was in a critical state, with the flesh completely torn.
Annette hurriedly took out antiseptic and bandages and began to treat the wound. The boy soldier groaned like a dying animal, his wounds were obviously painful.
There was actually no time to do this, but there was nothing that could be done properly when a person, a young boy, was dying in front of her.
Annette, tightly bandaged, rearranged her belongings. As she was about to leave with her bag, she heard Padania language coming from nearby.
âThank you.â
âHa.â
The other man grabbed Annetteâs waist as she almost slipped in surprise. She looked at the man with her eyes wide open.
âOh, Iâm sorry.â
âYes, yes â¦â¦â¦..?â
âI thought the job was done.â
Listened carefully again, and the manâs Padania language was a bit poor. Apparently, he was French, who could speak Padania language.
âOhâitâs all right.â
Annette awkwardly slipped out of the manâs arms. The man pulled back, scratching the back of his head.
âHeâs just a baby, that one.â
âWhat? Oh, that soldier.â
âHeâs a baby and heâs hurt a lot.â
âUmm. You can speak Padania languageâ¦â¦â¦â¦.â
âI can listen better, but I canât speak much.â
âI see.â
âBecause I like Padania food. I learned a bit of the language.â
âYes. â¦â¦â
Annette didnât know what to do. Was he trying to brag that he understood Padania language?
Annette was a little nervous. There was nothing good about staying here for so long. The odds of a foreigner even knowing the face of the Commander-in-Chiefâs ex-wife were slim, but it was difficult to know for sure.
âWhere are you going?â
âJustâthere.â
âItâs not safe there.â
âIâm a nurse. Nurse.â
âBut itâs still dangerous.â
âI appreciate your concern, but Iâm fine. Now thenââ
Annette spoke quickly, deliberately not paying attention to the other manâs language level. When she tried to turn around, the man hurried to block her way.
ââ¦?â
âYes?â
âI would like to know your name.â
ââ¦â¦ Catherine.â
Annette didnât bother with the borrowed name for long. Then the man smiled and mimicked her pronunciation.
âCatherine.â
âExcuse me, but Iâm busy, may I go now?â
âYes?â
âI have to go.â
âOh, you can speak French?â
Annette furrowed her brow. Apparently, this person didnât seem to be able to communicate. She could only understand to some extent.
The French soldiers who were playing cards next to them chuckled as they pointed at them. It was too fast for her to catch, but she was sure it was a teasing remark.
She heard the word âwomanâ in between. Even if she didnât understand, she had an idea what they were talking about, and Annette gently bit her lower lip.There really wasnât time to do this.