The command bunker was a squat, reinforced concrete shell half-buried into the red earth, disguised under a camouflage net and surrounded by freshly dug trenches lined with sandbags.
It was neither elegant nor particularly secure, but it served its purpose; close enough to the front to remain informed, but not so close as to be obliterated by Japanese artillery.
Bruno ducked under the low entrance and was greeted by the acrid stench of sweat, engine oil, and burning paper.
Inside, the air was thick and hot; the lights dimmed to preserve night vision. Field phones buzzed.
Radio operators murmured into headsets. Maps were pinned to every available surface; marked, crossed out, rewritten again.
At the far end of the bunker, standing ramrod straight in his black-piped grey uniform, was the lion of the old world.
Generalfeldmarschall August von Mackensen.
Bruno had grown used to seeing men decline with age, but Mackensen, well into his eighties, still carried himself like a Hussar from a forgotten era.
His posture had bent slightly with time, and the once-iron voice had softened to a gravelly echo, but the aura remained. A man carved from duty and drilled by war.
“Field Marshal,” Bruno said, offering a crisp salute.
Mackensen returned it, then waved the gesture off. “Save that for the Kaiser. I’m far too old to keep playing dress-up.”
Bruno stepped closer, noting how much weight the old man had lost. His once-regal mustache had grayed completely, though it remained waxed with Prussian precision.
“You summoned me, sir?”
Mackensen nodded toward the map table. “Yes. Okinawa is in our hands, but the next step must be planned. Sit.”
Bruno took a seat beside him. The table was a mess of elevation models, pinned photos, flight paths. A glass of warm mineral water sat untouched beside Mackensen’s cane.
“I’ve read your proposals,” the old man said, tapping a finger against a folder marked DÄMMERUNG. “They are brutal. Calculated. Necessary.”
“And?”
“And I approve. Not that my approval matters much anymore.” Mackensen sighed, turning his gaze to the bunker’s wall, as if trying to look past it; to the sea, to Europe, to a past that was rapidly turning to dust.
“This will be my last war,” he muttered. “A pity it wasn’t fought in defense of the Fatherland, but out here… in these dreadful tropics.”
Bruno said nothing. There was no comfort to give. The weight of Mackensen’s words hung heavy.
“The Kaiser’s sons,” Mackensen continued. “They think I’m a fossil. Maybe I am. I’ve fought three wars now, across two centuries. I remember the Balkans before the Slavs tore it apart. I remember Austria before her bones were picked clean. And now I sit here, seventy kilometers from the Japanese homeland, planning the end of an empire I once never thought we’d even face.”
He coughed into a cloth. A few specks of green phlegm stained it. Bruno pretended not to notice.
“I didn’t want this,” Mackensen confessed. “I wanted to die in Silesia. In peace. In a chair, with my grandchildren at my feet and a book on my lap. But instead, I’ll die here, in a sweat-soaked concrete box surrounded by telegraph cables and the smell of dead men.”
“You won’t die here,” Bruno said quietly. “In fact, I think you will live another decade in the peaceful retirement you have earned.
The old man chuckled. “Oh? It’s a funny thing, the way people speak of you, it’s as if you have always known the future and prepare perfectly for its approach. If what you say is true, I’ll die a believer.”
Bruno chuckled as he shook his head. “Maybe I am, maybe I’m not. As far as I’m concerned, I’m just a man who had a duty to protect his family, folk, and fatherland. And so I have always strived my best in this regard. With or without knowledge of the future seared into my brain.”
That earned a proper laugh, hoarse and pained, but genuine. “You are going to deny this until I’m buried beneath the earth, aren’t you?”
He straightened, refocusing.
“The Japanese will not surrender from air raids alone. Their heart still beats. It must be cut out. And that means Kyushu.”
Bruno nodded. “We begin with strikes on their remaining radar installations. Then airfields. Supply depots. Their navy has no capital ships left. Our carrier group is fully fueled. The Reich is ready.”
“And the Russians?”
“Alexei is still gathering strength. Seoul was a heavy toll. Busan was worse. But he’ll come. He has something to prove.”
Mackensen grunted. “He has a throne to prove worthy of. That kind of man is dangerous. But perhaps that’s what the world needs. Another bear in the east, to keep the wolves at bay.”
He looked down, his fingers resting on a photograph clipped to the map; a reconnaissance image of Kyushu, marked with targets and risk assessments. His gaze lingered.
“You know,” Mackensen said slowly, “we never meant for this world to look like this. After Paris… we thought there would be peace. Or at least, predictability.”
“That’s why it failed,” Bruno replied. “They fought to survive. We’re fighting to shape.”
The old marshal gave him a sideways look. “That’s the difference, is it? Between survival and ambition?”
“It always has been.”
The room fell quiet again. The only sounds were the rustle of maps and the occasional static crackle of the radios. Outside, a bomber’s engines roared to life.
After a long silence, Mackensen spoke again. His voice had taken on a weariness Bruno hadn’t heard before; not exhaustion, but resolution.
“Promise me one thing.”
“Anything.”
“When I go… don’t waste soldiers on pomp. No parade. No cannon salute. I want a letter sent to my son, and my medals melted down for the next batch of Iron Crosses.”
Bruno hesitated. “You’ll have a place in the Hall of Heroes.”
“I don’t want marble. I want memory. Let me be a story fathers tell their sons when they wonder what duty looks like.”
Bruno stood. “I can do that.”
Mackensen extended a frail but firm hand. Bruno took it, and for a moment, past and future locked in a silent pact.
“Then go,” Mackensen said. “Prepare the thunder. I’ll be here when the fire starts. But don’t wait for me.”
Bruno saluted again, this time without shame. He turned and made for the exit.
As he reached the doorway, he looked back once. Mackensen had returned to the map, tracing a finger across the southern shores of Japan, muttering softly to himself.
A man born in the age of cavalry, commanding the deathblow in the atomic era.
Outside, the sky had darkened. Bombers began to rise from the tarmac one by one, engines howling.
Bruno squinted into the sun as a silhouette passed overhead; a Do 217, fully loaded, headed north.
Operation Dämmerung had begun.
And the twilight before the final darkness had fallen.
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