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Now reading: Chapter 569 569: Battlefield Giant from I Became a Tycoon During World War I: Saving France from the Start, a Action novel by Frank10.

"Just pick sothing simple," Charles replied. "They won't mind."

But deep down, he felt a flicker of guilt. He had always taken Deoka and Camille's care and love for granted—never once had he considered what they might like in return.

Lucia seed to catch on. She didn't press further. Instead, she glanced sideways at him and asked:

"One last question—is this a family visit, or… a mission?"

Charles hesitated before answering:

"You can think of it as a mission."

It was the safest answer. If anyone asked why Lucia was eting his family, he could say it was part of maintaining operational security.

But what Charles didn't notice was the slight disappointnt that flashed in Lucia's eyes.

She had hoped he'd say it was personal. After all, she'd already t his mother. Naturally, the next step would be eting his parents formally—as his partner.

Charles's short leave was anything but restful.

He hadn't visited the factories in quite so ti. Early the next morning, after a quick breakfast, he and Deoka went to the tractor plant.

Charles headed straight for the R&D departnt. Upon entering, his eyes imdiately landed on Mathieu, who was in the middle of a discussion with technicians.

Mathieu now wore a prosthetic leg, giving him the look of a one-legged pirate. He sported a rough beard and ssy hair, clearly untouched by a comb for days. A pair of thick glasses rested on his nose.

When he spotted Charles, Mathieu removed the glasses and limped over, giving him a hearty laugh and a hug.

"Look at you!" Mathieu said, stepping back and taking in Charles's uniform.

"A general. A general who keeps beating the Germans. You're all anyone talks about. Honestly, I can't believe they're talking about you."

Charles gestured at the glasses.

"When did you beco nearsighted?"

Mathieu shrugged.

"The price of designing tanks."

As it turned out, Mathieu had been obsessively studying engine chanics—staying in the plant for days without returning ho. He ate, slept, and dread about tank developnt. The once easygoing student who used to fall asleep over textbooks had transford into a full-blown engineer.

"You're just in ti." Mathieu motioned Charles over to a desk, pointing at the blueprints laid out.

"Take a look—this is my idea for a new tank. Tell if it ets your standards."

Charles leaned in and was shocked.

It was a design for the Char 2C—France's massive, multi-turreted super-heavy tank.

(Historical Note: The Char 2C was developed in 1921. It weighed 70 tons, powered by two 250-horsepower engines, with twin turrets and massive armant.)

Charles frowned.

"Why would you want to build a tank like this?"

Mathieu bead with pride.

"I want to build an invincible tank—one that can crush anything and survive everything. Nothing should be able to penetrate its armor."

Then he rattled off technical specs:

"It's ard with a 75mm gun, frontal armor at 45mm. We tested it—it can withstand hits from German 77mm infantry guns..."

"Mathieu," Charles interrupted gently, "this isn't viable."

"Why not?" Mathieu's face fell. "I worked so hard on it…"

"Because no tank is invincible," Charles replied.

"How do you know if you don't try?" Mathieu shot back, unwilling to give up.

Charles sighed.

"Let's start with the weight."

Mathieu pulled a paper from the pile. "40 tons. Two engines—250 horsepower each. It can match the Char A1 in speed."

Impressive specs, but Charles knew better.

The Char 2C design, even with improvents, had eventually ballooned to 70 tons.

For comparison, the infamous WWII German Tiger tank weighed 56 tons and was already a logistical nightmare—even with a 650-horsepower engine.

And here they were, using two 250-hp engines to move 70 tons. It was a fantasy.

"Let put it this way," Charles said.

"Put two engines on a 40-ton sled and try pulling it through mud. See how far you get before it breaks down."

Mathieu's expression shifted.

"You're worried about reliability?"

"Exactly. Two engines an twice the failure rate."

It wasn't like aircraft, where dual engines ant one could keep the plane flying in an ergency. A tank's two engines worked in tandem—if either failed, the entire vehicle stopped.

Mathieu thought for a long mont, then nodded.

"You're right. A tank like that would be impossible to repair under combat conditions. One breakdown and it's scrap tal."

Charles nodded. That was the historical fate of the Char 2C—not destroyed by the enemy, but abandoned due to chanical failure and destroyed by its own crew to avoid capture.

Then Charles picked up a pencil and began sketching over the blueprints.

"Single turret. One engine. Scaled-down design, much lighter."

(Historical Note: Charles was redesigning what would eventually beco the Char B1, France's most powerful pre-WWII heavy tank—known as the 'Battlefield Giant'.)

Mathieu leaned in, eyes wide.

"Wait—two guns? You're giving it two guns?"

He pointed at the design.

"The hull-mounted 75mm gun—doesn't that have limited mobility?"

"That's fine," Charles said.

"It's ant to fire straight ahead. Use it against bunkers, trenches, enemy tank fronts—where high penetration matters."

In such situations, wide angles weren't necessary.

Mathieu studied the blueprint. With the turret carrying a smaller, faster-firing gun, and the hull housing the big one, it was a near-perfect combination. Versatile, but still compact.

His eyes lit up.

"My God… its firepower isn't far off from what I designed. But it's smaller, lighter, and with one engine, it's cheaper and less prone to failure."

He turned to Charles, half amused, half in awe:

"I'm starting to hate you a little, Charles. You outdid with a sketch."

Charles grinned. It wasn't a random sketch—it was the product of years of French tank developnt, projected into the present.

Thank you for the support, friends. If you want to read more chapters in advance, go to my Patreon.

Read 30 Chapters In Advance: patreon/Franklin1

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