A STORY ABOUT A REAL MAN 281 field tonight. Go quietly, without firing a shot, as if you are Germans, and when you get near enough, charge in among 'em, bang away with all your guns and turn every- thing upside down before they know where they are; and see to it that not a single bastard gets away.' This task was given to my crowd and another battalion that was put under my command. The rest of the outfit went on towards Rostov. "Well, we got into that airfield like a fox into a hen- coop. You won't believe it, Alyosha, but we got right to the German traffic regulators near the field. Nobody stopped us—it was a foggy morning and they couldn't see anything, they could only hear the sound of the engines and the rattling of the tracks. They thought we were Ger- mans. Then we let loose and went for them. It was fun, I can tell you, Alyosha! The planes were lined up in rows. We fired armour-piercing shells and each shot went through half a dozen at least. But we saw that we couldn't do the job that way, because the crews that had some pluck began to start the engines. So we closed our hatches and started to ram them in the tails. They were transport planes, huge things, we couldn't reach their engines, so we went for their tails, they couldn't fly without tails any more than they could without engines. And that is where I got laid out. I opened the hatch and popped my head out to take a look round, and just then my tank ran into one of the planes. A fragment of the wing hit me in the head, A good thing my helmet softened the blow, else I would have been a goner. Everything's all right now and I'll be leaving the hospital soon and be among my tank boys again before long. The real trouble is that in the hospital they shaved my beard off. After all the trouble I took to grow it—it was a fine, broad beard—they went and shaved it off without the least pity. Well, to hell with the beard! We are moving pretty fast now, but still, I think I'll be able to grow an- other before the war's over, and hide my ugliness, I must tell you, though, Alyosha, for some reason Anyuta has taken a dislike to my beard and scolds me about it in every letter." It was a long letter. It was evident that Gvozdev had written it to while away the tedium of hospital life. In- cidentally, at the end of the letter he wrote that nea^r