Re: Blood and Iron

Chapter 611: Steel Without Spirit



Chapter 611: Steel Without Spirit

The sky above the northern plains of France thundered with the roar of engines, not of weather, but of machine.

Sweeping low over the rolling fields, formations of twin-engine bombers cut through the gray clouds, their dark fuselages gleaming with the tricolor roundel of the Armée de l’Air.

They moved in perfect formation, too perfect. Rehearsed. Artificial.

On the ground, the blast of a whistle sent entire battalions of French infantrymen surging forward from their foxholes, bayonets fixed, rifles braced.

Their pace was quick… but not rushed.

Each man carried the newly issued MAS-36/34, a semiautomatic rifle born from joint development with American consultants.

Rugged, accurate, gas-piston driven.

No more bolt-action fumbling. No more lagging behind.

Or so they hoped.

The mock battlefield trembled again. This time from the distant hammering of belt-fed machine guns mounted on wheeled platforms.

A row of Hotchkiss Requa-XM19s, designed with British cooperation, poured tracer fire into imaginary targets across the treeline.

Their crews shouted timings to one another in clipped military French, ticking off each phase of the live-fire exercise.

Behind them came the steel beasts.

Renault-Cromwell Type Bs, co-developed with British engineers, churned over the muddy earth, faster, better-armored, turreted with long-barreled 75mm guns adapted from American designs.

Engines roared. Threads clanked. Their painted insignias shone too clean beneath the overcast sky, like medals on a child’s toy soldier.

Watching from a reinforced command overlook, René Altmayer stood still with his hands clasped behind his back.

The old war hero, now a symbol more than a commander, bore a look carved from marble… stern, unreadable.

Beside him stood General Alphonse Georges, newly promoted head of the modernized French Army, and Marshal Charles de Gaulle, his boots muddied, coat pressed, eyes sunken with restless energy.

“Well?” René asked quietly.

Georges nodded. “Discipline has improved. The drills are tighter. The men know the new equipment. It’s not just a parade anymore.”

De Gaulle, arms crossed, let the silence hang a beat longer.

Then:

“They’re trying. But we’re still behind.”

René arched an eyebrow. “Behind whom?”

“Do you have to ask?”

He didn’t. Not really.

Germany.

Since the announcement, Bruno von Zehntner’s revelation of the Erich von Humboldt files, and the thunderous declaration that Germany stood ready for another world war.

The political ground beneath Europe had shifted. France had not only lost in Spain; it had lost its place as the moral bastion of postwar peace.

De Gaulle had tried to spin it. Tried to bury it under propaganda.

But the shadow of German steel reached long.

“It is not just their machines,” De Gaulle continued. “It’s how they use them. Their doctrine. Their momentum. Their economy. Their unity. We cannot match their precision simply by copying their tools.”

René didn’t reply. The old man’s face was unmoved, but his hands had curled into fists behind his back.

From below came the deafening whoosh of rocket-assisted artillery launching from American-designed towed platforms.

The Modèle 1933 rocket artillery, painted blue and gray, filled the sky with smoke trails like thrown spears.

The impact thundered across the field as artificial bunkers detonated into flame.

“Do you know what the Americans call this exercise?” De Gaulle asked.

Georges shook his head.

“Operation Tempered Resolve.”

A phrase born in Washington, agreed to in London, and reluctantly accepted in Paris.

“We are tempering weapons,” De Gaulle said coldly. “Not men. And certainly not wills.”

A silence settled over the overlook. One of the British liaison officers, a squat Royal Artillery major with a clipboard, turned and raised his voice.

“Second wave incoming. Airborne infantry dropping in ten.”

They looked to the sky again.

Four American Douglas C-32 Skytrucks, lent from Roosevelt’s modernization push, appeared above the horizon, black dots widening into transports.

Paratroopers began to drop, British and French, their parachutes blooming white against the gray.

“Proper timing, proper elevation,” the British officer muttered.

But De Gaulle wasn’t looking at the sky.

He was looking at the press box.

On the far end of the field, under a white tent, sat a cadre of journalists. French. British. Even one or two Americans.

Their pens scratched furiously. Cameras clicked. De Gaulle knew what they were writing before the ink dried:

“France joins the modern world.””Joint efforts show promise.””A Coalition of Liberty prepares for peace through strength.”

And every word would be a lie.

Because they weren’t preparing for peace. They were preparing for inevitability.

De Gaulle pulled his gloves tight, then turned to René.

“We can’t stall this, Marshal. Sooner or later, Germany will act. And the question is, when it happens, will this army break before the first tank crosses the border?”

Pétain didn’t answer. He was watching the smoke rise.

President Franklin D. Roosevelt sat in the Oval Office, staring at the speech Bruno had delivered the day before.

Translated, annotated, and underlined by six different intelligence analysts.

He held his cane loosely across his lap.

Secretary of State Cordell Hull stood across from him, pale with concern.

“We cannot match him in rhetoric,” Hull admitted. “Not without sounding like we’re about to invade the entire globe.”

Roosevelt chuckled bitterly. “God forbid…”

“Sir?”

FDR waved it off. “Nothing. Just… déjà vu.”

The room was silent except for the soft tick of a mantle clock.

“Spain was a disaster,” Roosevelt muttered. “The Philippines was a fire we barely put out. And now this.”

He jabbed a finger at the papers.

“He’s using the truth like a sword. Twisting it into conviction. We can’t deny the sabotage trials. We can’t deny the revolts. We can’t even deny that we tried to sink him in Spain and failed.”

“So… what do we do?”

Roosevelt leaned back.

“I pull back. Quietly. No speeches. No escalations. Let de Gaulle rattle the saber. Let the British fund their upgrades. But I’m not marching into another goddamn war with Germany while I’m already patching up two others.”

Hull nodded slowly.

“Message to Berlin, then?”

Roosevelt shook his head.

“Message to Paris.”

Élysée Palace, Paris

Charles de Gaulle stared at the headlines and nearly broke the frame.

“Roosevelt retreats. America to ’reassess’ foreign posture.”

“Britain cools rhetoric after Bruno’s speech draws blood.”

He slammed the page down. The walls of his office shook with the force of his breath.

“COWARDS,” he spat.

Across the room, his aide stood silently.

“He threatens the world. The world. He paints France as the villain… paints me as the warmonger. And what does London do? What does Washington do?”

He flung the newspaper against the fireplace.

“They blink.”

The aide shifted uncomfortably.

“And public support?”

De Gaulle turned slowly, eyes burning.

“They’re frightened. They saw Spain. They see Germany armed to the teeth. And they ask if we are safe.”

He drew in a long, slow breath.

“Find every journalist we still have on the payroll. Every sympathetic pen. I want features, not rebuttals. Not denial. Indignation. Paint Bruno as a liar. A tyrant. A warmonger cloaked in old banners.”

The aide nodded.

“And the public?” he asked.

De Gaulle clenched his fists.

“Let them hate. Let them fear. So long as they stand behind us when the war begins.”

The fire crackled low. The beer on his desk was already half-warm.

Bruno von Zehntner sat quietly, legs crossed, eyes scanning the dossier in his hands. Images taken from within the French and British Army.

The weapons tested, the ones still under prototyping, and development. It was advanced, sure, advanced beyond what they would have had in the mid 1930s of his past life.

But he had anticipated that. After all, the impact he had made on the world was big. Perhaps bigger than any man in history. And it was not yet over.

Not by a long shot.

Bruno sipped on his beer once more, as he gazed over at the man seated across from him.

Generalfeldmarschall Heinrich von Koch.

The last of his closest friends.

They had gone through their entire military careers together.

Risen through the ranks fighting in the same trenches.

And now they stood at the top.

One born the 9th son of a Prussian Junker, now the Grand Prince of Tyrol.

Another, born the eldest son of a wealthy merchant family. Now a Count in Prussia.

They sat, and drank in silence.

Not discussing the late member of what had been a trio.

Nor the files Bruno revealed to the public.

Instead Bruno shifted the folder over to Heinrich and asked one single question.

“Your thoughts?”

Heinrich said nothing… not at first. But as he flipped through the pages he swiftly came to the same conclusion as Bruno himself had.

“About a generation behind, maybe a generation a half in some regards. With the Russians at our side, armed with our own weapons, and the minor powers who have aligned with us sporting similar equipment as the Allies. I’d say give it a year… Maybe two and without being blindsided by fate itself, victory is certain.”

Bruno remained silent as he finished the last of his beer. But Heinrich’s words he had spoken half in jest, resounded throughout his mind.

“Without being blindsided by fate itself…”

If only Heinrich knew that Bruno’s enemy was not France, or the Allied Powers, but Destiny.


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