Re: Blood and Iron

Chapter 662: The Hammer Has Fallen



The snow crunched beneath his boots as Bruno entered the cemetery.

Each step sank into the drifts, the sound sharp and hollow in the evening silence.

He had not gone directly home after the passing of his father just hours before.

Instead he had visited the military graveyard where Prussia's greatest heroes were buried with full honors.

He walked without lantern, without guide. He did not need one.

There was no hesitation, no pause to search for direction. His body knew the way.

He had walked this path so often that it had become muscle memory, as natural as the patrol routes of a soldier.

Once, outside Tsaritsyn, he and Erich had traced the same circuits night after night, trudging through mud and frost as they laid siege to the city the Reds had seized in 1905.

Their boots had carved paths into the earth back then, just as his feet carved a path now in the snow.

The wind cut at his face, sharp and biting, yet he pressed on without flinching.

The cold was nothing new to him. He had endured far worse in the trenches, and if frost could not break him then, it would not now.

At last, he came to the grave.

He stopped, and stood in silence. The night was windless.

Only the soft fall of snow disturbed the world, settling in his hair, clinging to his shoulders, covering the stone before him.

For a long while, he said nothing.

Then at last, in a voice barely above a whisper, he spoke.

"To think, of all the men I buried in those years… yours is the one I come back to most."

His breath plumed in the cold air, fading as quickly as the words themselves.

He stared at the stone, its inscription clear even through the frost:

Erich von Humboldt: Hero of the Reich.

"It wasn't always so, was it?" Bruno murmured. "You were the spoiled brat, the pampered cadet who mocked me at every turn. I should have hated you forever. Perhaps I did, in those first days."

The snow hissed faintly against his coat, the only answer.

"But the Academy stripped you down. It burned the softness out of you. I saw the boy who laughed at me forced to bleed, to endure, to rise again. By the time the world dragged us into war, you had become something else. You had become my friend… My brother."

The word Brother…. One that normally invoked a sense of comraderie, of kinship. One that held no meaning to Bruno. Not for a long time.

He reflected on the years growing up, where his own siblings had treated him like dirt. Or worse like he didn't exist at all.

A heavy sigh escaped his lips, the hot breath steaming on the frigid winter wind, as he gazed at the name written on the headstone yet again.

"I never loved my brothers… A shame for a man to admit, believe me I know this in my heart better than anyone. But you and Heinrich were the brothers I found in this life. Not of kinship, but of blood shed in pursuit of glory, of fidelity, of duty…."

His eyes closed, and he saw it again, the rain of 1916, the black sky over the Reich, deep behind the frontlines, the trenches, where blood, and bone rot beneath the mud.

Erich's final salute, sharp and unflinching. The order Bruno had given. The obedience with which Erich had walked into death.

"I told myself it was duty," Bruno said quietly. "That it was necessary. That the Reich demanded it. Perhaps it did. But I have lived long enough to know the truth: it was needless. I sent you to your death because I saw no other path. I could not imagine one. And for that failure, I damned us both."

His hand touched the cold stone, brushing away snow.

"I have made peace with it, if peace can be made. I kept my promise, at least. The world calls you hero now, not traitor. They sing of your sacrifice. Your family holds their heads high. History remembers you as I wished it to. But you and I know the truth. And God knows it too."

The cemetery stretched quiet around him, a forest of white stones.

Here lay generals who had marched beside him, princes who had once toasted victory in candlelit halls, soldiers who had died nameless but not forgotten.

He had walked among them for years, watching the rows lengthen as each season passed.

And now, more and more, he found himself the last man standing at every remembrance.

The weight of survival pressed harder than the grave ever could.

His gaze drifted among them, and he felt the weight of years press down.

"My father is gone now. Today I watched him die, as I watched you. His hand had been frail, paper-thin, yet in that last moment it clutched mine with all the weight of a century."

Bruno stood there in silence for several moments. Desperately trying to form the words that would do the man justice.

"He was a different breed of man. The last of a bygone era. A Prussian Junker who had seen the old Kaiser crowned, who had buried emperors and watched the Reich rise from iron and blood."

His voice choked on itself. A slight stutter escaped his lips, threatening to crack with the weight behind it.

"And now he too was lowered into the ground, leaving me to wonder if I had lived up to the man who raised me, or betrayed the world he once believed in."

His breath became heavy as Bruno struggled to halt the tears welling up behind his sky blue eyes.

"Nicholas, gone. Even Wilhelm is fading, and soon the world will lower him into the earth as well. Everything I have built, everything I have fought to preserve, one by one, it is taken from me."

He let out a long breath, the frost curling from his lips like smoke.

"I thought this life was a gift, once. A second chance. But now I see it for what it is. A theater of loss. Even my Heidi, even my children, bright, laughing, alive, I know one day I will stand over their graves as I stand over yours."

Bruno's eyes became glassy as the thought hit him like a bayonet to the heart. He instinctively clutched his chest and looked down as the thought words escaped his lips.

"Or worse, they will stand over mine…. That is the curse of love, is it not? To win the world and yet be powerless to stop it from slipping away"

The silence thickened. Bruno straightened, squaring his shoulders against the cold, his hand still resting on the grave.

Then he reached into his pocket, and pulled out a fresh packet of cigarettes.

A vice he had long since forsaken.

The last time he had performed such an act was when he had ordered an end to the German-Japanese war through fire and fury.

Now he had turned to the old disgusting habit once more. Not because of stress, but grief.

He lit the device as it struggled to stay between his trembling fingers.

Fingers that stilled the moment the old cancerous drug hit his lungs.

The smoke curled into the night, and for a fleeting moment, he almost smiled.

"You know," he muttered, eyes on the stone, "Heidi would kill me if she knew I was smoking again…"

But there was no laughter.

No shared moment of catharsis between brothers in arms making grim remarks about their fate.

There was only silence.

And that was the most damning part of it all.

For once, Erich had no reply, no crude joke to ease the burden, no curse spat at the world they both despised.

Only stillness, and the grave that answered nothing

It was not relief that overcame Bruno as he released the plume of smoke for the first time in years.

No, it was shame… remorse, guilt even.

And then he stared off into the sky, taking another drag.

Because sometimes what is necessary… is shameful.

A heavy sigh escaped his lips.

"Sometimes I wonder… what was the point of it all?"

Bruno then tossed the cigarette to the floor, and stamped it out.

Perhaps feeling his friend's judging eyes from the afterlife as he confessed his innermost turmoil aloud.

"Rest now, Erich. You carried my burdens once. And I shouldn't be burdening you anymore than I already have."

He turned, the snow crunching once more beneath his boots as he made his way toward the gate.

At its threshold he stopped, his voice low, cast into the empty night:

"What is the purpose of duty, if at the end of the day, all that I have fought so hard to preserve turns to memory in the end? And when even memory dies, what remains of us at all?"

The snow gave no answer. Only silence remained, deep and eternal.


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