Billy crouched behind the crumpled wreck of a German half-track, his M1 Garand pressed against his chest. Beside him, breathing in the same wet, diesel-tainted air, was his squad leader, Staff Sergeant Jacob “Jake” Marino. They had been brothers since Toccoa, Georgia—through the jump into Normandy, through the bloody hedgerows, through the frozen hell of Bastogne. Now, September 1944, they were on a road they’d come to call Hell’s Highway.
“He was just a kid!”
Billy looked at the bodies. American and German, tangled together in the mud like brothers who had forgotten why they were fighting. “No,” he said. “But I’m still standing.”
The Panzergrenadiers behind it dismounted, fanning out into the mud. And then it was close work—rifle butts, bayonets, the sharp crack of pistols fired into rain-slicked helmets. Billy shot a German soldier no older than Eddie. The man fell with a surprised look, as if he’d just realized he was in the wrong place at the wrong time. Brothers In Arms- Hell-s Highway
“You okay?” Jake asked.
Eddie turned, eyes wide as dinner plates. A burst of German fire caught him in the chest. He crumpled like a discarded puppet. The rain washed his blood into the mud before Billy could even close his mouth.
They ran, boots slipping in the slop, as machine-gun fire stitched the ground behind them. Billy dove headfirst into the drainage ditch, landing hard on his shoulder. Jake landed next to him, then Private Donnelly, then Corporal Hayes. But the kid—Private First Class Eddie Raynor, just eighteen, from Kansas—was still in the open. Billy crouched behind the crumpled wreck of a
“Fall back to the ditch!” Jake shouted.
“Hell’s Highway,” Billy muttered. “They can have it.”
“He’s gone, Billy. He’s gone.”
“Billy,” Jake whispered, not looking at him. His eyes were fixed on the tree line fifty yards away, where SS Panzergrenadiers had dug in. “You hear that?”
The rain had not stopped for eleven days. It fell in a gray, weeping sheet over the Dutch countryside, turning the shattered roads into canals of mud and muck. For Private First Class William "Billy" Rourke of the 101st Airborne, the rain was just another enemy—one without a face, one that rotted your boots, your rations, and your hope.
When it was over, the field was quiet except for the rain and the moans of the dying. Billy leaned against the smoldering tank, hands shaking. Jake walked over, a fresh gash on his cheek, his uniform torn. Now, September 1944, they were on a road
“No, no, no—” Billy tried to scramble out of the ditch, but Jake grabbed his harness and yanked him back.
What happened next was not strategy. It was fury. The squad crawled through the ditch until they were parallel with the lead tank. Jake pulled the pin on a fragmentation grenade, waited two beats, and lobbed it into the tank’s open commander’s hatch. The explosion was muffled, but the tank lurched to a stop, smoke pouring from every seam.