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Now reading: Chapter 227: General Zhilinskys Response from The Unwanted Prince of Prussia, a Adventure novel by Preciouslore.

The headquarters of the Russian Northwestern Front stood in eastern Poland, in the town of Białystok, housed in a broad governnt building that had once symbolized provincial order and imperial bureaucracy. Before the war it had been a place of paperwork, tax ledgers, legal petitions, and administrative dignity. Now telegraph wires ran through its corridors like exposed nerves. Maps covered the walls. Muddy boots hamred over polished floors. Clerks hurried from room to room with dispatch satchels clutched to their chests. Outside the tall windows the streets were thick with the traffic of retreat—wagons, wounded n, shattered supply trains, horses without riders, officers without composure, and the broken remains of an army trying to convince itself that it still existed.

At the center of that chaos sat General Yakov Grigoryevich Zhilinsky, commander of the Northwestern Front, and therefore the man responsible for the invasion of East Prussia itself.

Only a short ti earlier, the campaign had seed almost insultingly simple.

He had held under his authority two armies: the First Army under Rennenkampf, advancing from the east, and the Second Army under Samsonov, driving north from the south. Two Russian armies, full of regular troops, artillery, cavalry, and all the weight that only the Tsar's empire could throw into a border war. They could have been even stronger if given more ti—more reserves, more conscripts, more ammunition stockpiles—but by every reasonable calculation they were already strong enough.

The German force before them, the old Eighth Army, was supposed to be small.

One hundred thousand n, perhaps.

One hundred and fifty thousand at most.

Two hundred thousand only if the Germans stripped reserves from elsewhere and rushed them east at the cost of their western plans.

And even if they had done that, what of it?

East Prussia was too wide, too exposed, too long in frontage for such a force to defend properly. Zhilinsky's design had therefore seed obvious: Rennenkampf would strike from the east, Samsonov from the south, and the Germans would be caught between them like prey in closing jaws. If they retreated, they would be pursued. If they stood, they would be fixed. If they hesitated, they would be encircled.

And even if the Germans fought well—well, what then?

Russia had numbers.

Russia had depth.

Russia had ti.

Weeks of fighting would only favor the empire that could pour forth fresh n forever. New conscripts would co. Reinforcents would fill the losses. East Prussia itself, fertile and prosperous, would feed the invaders for a ti—its farms, villages, storehouses, and towns easing the strain on Russian supply lines and allowing the advance to remain fast, light, and ruthless.

That had been the theory.

It had made perfect sense on maps.

Perfect sense in staff conferences.

Perfect sense to a man like Zhilinsky.

He had not risen through the empire by luck. He was not a drunken provincial fool or so vain cavalry braggart. He had been shaped by the best military education Russia could offer, trained through elite institutions, polished by staff work, and raised through the machinery of empire by decades of service. He had worn rank and responsibility for most of his life. He had commanded districts, managed staffs, studied rail schedules, deploynts, plans, operational depths, and the mathematics of war. He had been a man trusted by the Tsar's state.

And now one of his armies no longer truly existed.

And the other was pinned, stalled, and failing.

He sat alone in his personal office on the upper floor, behind a broad desk almost entirely swallowed by paper. Reports stood in tall, uneven piles on either side of him. More lay in front of him, spread wide in overlapping sheets. The newest dispatch rested directly beneath his hands.

He was over sixty now.

A man of average height and build, softened sowhat by age and years of headquarters service, yet still held upright by the habits of command beaten into him over a lifeti. His hair, thinning at the temples, had been carefully brushed back. His moustache was neat. His uniform was immaculate—at least in form. In every outward sense he still resembled what he was supposed to be: a high general of the Russian Empire, a man of rank, education, and consequence.

But the illusion ended at the eyes.

They were too wide.

Too bright.

Too strained.

His breathing had beco shallow and uneven. Sweat soaked his collar despite the relative coolness of the room. Again and again his gaze passed over the sa words as if he might force them to change by repetition alone.

They never did.

Second Army destroyed.

Warsaw fallen.

German forces advancing eastward in strength.

More reports said the sa in different hands, from different officers, from broken remnants of staffs, from surviving cavalry commanders, from railway authorities, from fleeing infantry officers, from n who no longer even seed certain where their own units were.

Each report repeated the sa nas.

The sa army.

The sa prince.

The Black Legion.

And the Iron Prince.

A giant in black armor. A rider with a skull-faced helm. A man described less like a commander than like so infernal beast dragged out of Scripture and loosed upon the earth. A prince who led assaults personally, who seed to move with impossible speed, who cut through Russian formations as if n were reeds. A prince backed by armored vehicles, aircraft, radios, new artillery thods, and a kind of warfare that Russian survivors struggled even to describe coherently.

Zhilinsky's mind rejected it.

It had to be exaggeration.

Hysteria.

The fantasies of shattered n trying to explain what they could not understand.

And yet the reports kept agreeing.

Not in every detail.

But in the shape of the truth.

The truth was now inescapable.

The Second Army was gone.

Not delayed.

Not checked.

Gone.

And with it, sothing in him seed to have been ripped out as cleanly as if a limb had been severed from his body. It felt not like hearing of a defeat, but like discovering that part of his own flesh had been amputated without warning. A phantom wound. A missing arm. A great emptiness where strength had once been.

He stared at the papers before him as if their sheer weight might crush him through the desk and into the floorboards.

To his left, against the wall, a narrow shelf held several bottles of vodka and brandy, crystal glasses lined neatly beside them—comforts ant for a general of high station.

His eyes kept drifting toward them.

The thought returned again and again.

One drink.

Just one.

Perhaps even a cigar.

That would steady his nerves. Clear his head. Help him think like a commander again instead of a man drowning in reports.

Perhaps if he drank, the pressure building behind his eyes would loosen. Perhaps if he drank, the nightmare written across those dispatches would blur, beco sothing temporary—so terrible misunderstanding that daylight and fresh orders might yet correct.

Perhaps Saint Petersburg would send help quickly.

Perhaps Rennenkampf would recover the situation.

Perhaps the Germans were not nearly as strong as these hysterical reports claid.

Perhaps his career was not already finished.

Perhaps everything had not yet slipped beyond saving.

Yet beneath those desperate hopes he knew the truth.

The reports were real.

The officers writing them were not fools.

The Second Army was gone.

His chest tightened painfully.

If the Germans truly continued advancing at this pace—if the so-called Black Legion truly was what the survivors described—then not only his career but the entire Russian campaign in the east might collapse.

Perhaps more than that.

Perhaps the Empire itself stood closer to danger than anyone in Saint Petersburg yet understood.

His hand drifted slowly toward the pen lying on the desk.

He needed to write sothing.

An order.

A correction.

A command.

Anything that might restore the illusion that events were still under his control.

But every line of thought ended in fog.

Every solution seed to arrive too late.

Then the door burst open.

There had been a knock first—quick, sharp, almost perfunctory—but the officer entering had not waited for permission.

"Your Excellency, Commander of the Northwestern Front!"

An adjutant hurried inside, pale-faced and breathless, mud still clinging to his boots from the courtyard below. He stopped just short of the desk and snapped into a rigid posture, though the panic in his eyes ruined the formality of it.

General Yakov Grigoryevich Zhilinsky looked up sharply.

This, more than anything, told him how bad the day had beco.

All day the reports had co and gone in proper order—knock, permission, entry, salute, dispatch, withdrawal. Even panic had worn a uniform.

Now n were beginning to burst into his office like frightened clerks in a fire.

"Speak," Zhilinsky said.

The adjutant swallowed.

"Urgent dispatch from Saint Petersburg, Your Excellency. The Tsar and the High Command request clarification regarding your earlier telegram."

He hesitated only a second.

"They ask what precisely you ant by a minor setback… and how such a setback can place the entire eastern campaign in jeopardy unless imdiate reinforcent is sent from the Sixth, Ninth, and Tenth Armies."

For a heartbeat, Zhilinsky simply stared at him.

Then his face twisted.

"What do they an, what do I an?" he burst out. "Was the ssage not clear enough? If reinforcents are not sent at once, then the entire position may collapse!"

He surged to his feet so violently that papers slid from the desk and scattered across the floorboards.

"The armies in Galicia could be exposed from the north! Exposed—turned—cut off! Do they understand that? Do they understand what that ans?"

The adjutant stiffened.

"Yes, Your Excellency, but they request—"

"I know what they request!"

Zhilinsky's voice cracked like a whip.

Then, just as quickly, the rage faltered.

He stopped.

Breathed.

Pressed both hands flat against the desk.

He could not say it openly.

He could not send back the naked truth—not yet. Not until he had sothing, anything, that resembled control.

"No," he muttered. "No… wait."

His eyes dropped to the papers before him. His mind raced. He forced his tone back into sothing colder, more deliberate.

"Tell them," he said, "that the enemy is stronger than our earlier estimates suggested."

The adjutant blinked.

"Yes, Your Excellency."

"Much stronger."

Zhilinsky straightened slowly, as if rearranging his own posture might restore the shape of reality.

"Tell them Prince Oskar has mobilized not rely the Eighth Army, but the whole population of East Prussia into support formations, militia, rear security, reserve units—whatever phrase seems best. Tell them he commands a force vastly larger than previously believed."

He paused, then said it:

"Tell them… five hundred thousand."

The adjutant looked startled.

Zhilinsky changed it imdiately.

"No. Six hundred thousand."

The man hesitated. "Six hundred thousand, Your Excellency?"

Zhilinsky's eyes flashed.

"Do not question . Write it."

The adjutant nodded at once.

"Yes, Your Excellency."

"Tell them that if imdiate reinforcents are not dispatched, Warsaw itself may be endangered and the whole campaign placed at further risk. Tell them we require the Ninth and Tenth Armies—or elents of them—the mont they are ready. We must stabilize the line before the Germans seize the initiative completely."

The adjutant looked as though he wanted to object—wanted to say what they both knew: Warsaw was already lost.

But before he could speak, the door opened again.

A second officer stumbled in, face grey with strain.

"Your Excellency—urgent report from the city approaches!"

Zhilinsky turned on him at once.

"Well?"

"The remnants of the Second Army are arriving in Białystok in complete disorder, sir. Many are not even reaching their assigned assembly points. They are scattering the mont they enter the city. So are seizing carts. So are taking trains east without orders. Many are throwing away their rifles and equipnt. Others are stripping off their uniforms and attempting to pass as civilians."

The officer swallowed hard.

"Discipline is collapsing, Your Excellency. Morale is nearly gone. The officers are asking what they are to do. There are not enough n to hold the towns and villages between us and the Germans if the advance continues."

Zhilinsky opened his mouth—

But nothing ca out.

He stared.

The officer pressed on, almost desperately.

"The latest reports place German forward elents near Łomża. Less than eighty kiloters away, sir. If they continue at this pace—"

"Enough."

But the word ca out weaker than he intended.

The officer fell silent.

For a mont Zhilinsky rely stood there, one hand half-raised, as though trying to pull an answer out of the air itself.

"Tell them…" he began.

His voice faltered.

"Tell them…"

He stopped again, his face tightening in visible frustration.

What was he supposed to tell them?

Hold?

Retreat?

Shoot deserters?

Form new lines from troops that no longer behaved like troops?

"Damn them," he muttered under his breath. "Damn those undisciplined bastards…"

His fingers twitched on the edge of the desk.

Then the door opened a third ti.

Another adjutant entered, telegram sheet clutched so tightly in his hand that it had crumpled at the edges.

"Your Excellency—ssage from General Rennenkampf. Imdiate."

Zhilinsky's head snapped toward him.

The officer swallowed, then read:

"General Rennenkampf requests clarification of your previous order to attack. He states that any direct assault on the German line at present would be equivalent to throwing his army into a well."

The room went still.

The adjutant continued, his voice tightening with every word.

"He reports that the German defenses along the river are too strong to break by frontal action. Their artillery is well sighted. Their machine guns are entrenched. Their aircraft continue to strike guns, wagons, and assembly points before the n can even form properly. He states that losses are mounting for no gain, and that to continue pressing in the sa manner would only destroy what remains of his army."

For a heartbeat Zhilinsky simply stared.

Then sothing in him tore loose.

"What?"

The word ca out low and feral.

"Is he refusing my orders?"

The adjutant hesitated.

Zhilinsky's fist slamd onto the desk hard enough to make the inkwell jump.

"Is that Baltic German bastard refusing my orders?" he roared.

No one answered.

His face had gone red.

"If he does not attack now, then there will be nothing—nothing—to stop the Germans from driving deeper south! Does he understand that? Does he understand what hangs upon this?"

The officer with the telegram stood rigid, eyes fixed straight ahead.

Zhilinsky rounded on him as if Rennenkampf himself were standing in the room.

"Send this back to him imdiately," he snapped. "Tell him he is to attack. At once. I do not care what excuses he wraps it in."

The n in the room did not move.

Zhilinsky's voice rose further, half command, half breakdown.

"If he says attacking is like throwing his n into a well, then let him throw them! Let him throw in so many that the well fills with bodies and the rest can cross over them!"

The words rang through the office.

For a second even he seed to hear what he had just said.

The adjutants stared.

The clerks in the hallway beyond the half-open door had gone silent.

Zhilinsky's breath ca fast. His lips twitched. Sweat glead at his temples.

Then, abruptly, he dragged a hand across his face.

"No—"

He shut his eyes for a mont.

"No. Wait."

His voice had dropped, but only slightly.

"Write this instead. Write that he is to put pressure on the Germans by every ans available. He is to attack where he can, demonstrate where he cannot, threaten crossings, force them to redeploy, strike their outposts, bombard their concentrations—whatever can be done. But he is to do it now."

His eyes opened again, hard and fever-bright.

"And tell him this plainly: if he thinks he can hide behind caution, if he thinks he can excuse disobedience under the cover of military prudence, then he is mistaken. There will be consequences. For him. For his career. For everything attached to his na."

The adjutant wet his lips.

"Yes, Your Excellency."

Zhilinsky pointed sharply at him.

"Tell him the fate of this campaign now hangs on his obedience. If all is lost, then I will see to it personally that the bla does not fall on alone."

That, too, the officer understood.

He nodded quickly.

At once Zhilinsky turned to the second adjutant, the one who had brought news from the city approaches.

"And you."

The man stiffened.

"Tell the officers that discipline is to be restored imdiately. If n are found throwing away their rifles, abandoning their posts, stripping off uniforms, or attempting to flee as civilians, they are to be stopped. Warned once if there is ti. If there is not—or if they continue—they are to be shot."

The officer hesitated.

"Your Excellency, the numbers—"

"I do not care about the numbers!"

Zhilinsky's voice cracked through the room like a whip.

"This is the Russian Army. We have not been at war for even a month and already they scatter like frightened peasants? No. No! I will not have the army disintegrate under my command in a matter of days. Do you hear ?"

"Yes, Your Excellency."

"Then go."

The two adjutants bowed sharply and withdrew, almost colliding with one another in their haste to leave.

The door closed.

Silence flooded back into the office.

Zhilinsky remained standing for one long mont, both hands braced on the desk, head hanging low between his shoulders.

Then, suddenly, he struck the wood once with the side of his fist.

"Damn it…"

The word ca out as a broken hiss.

He could feel it now with perfect clarity.

It was over.

Not the war.

Not yet.

But his war.

His campaign.

His beautiful map-room certainty.

His years of service, of schools, of staff work, of obedience, of ambition, of slow ascent through the machinery of the Empire—everything that had brought him to this office, to this rank, to this command—had in less than a week been hacked to pieces and thrown into the mud.

He had given his life to the army.

Put family aside.

Put comfort aside.

Built himself into a man the Empire trusted with armies.

And now the Empire's trust was collapsing in his hands.

He straightened sharply, as if refusing to let himself sag.

Then he turned and strode to the shelf.

No hesitation now.

He snatched up a bottle of vodka, tore the stopper loose, and drank straight from the neck.

The liquor burned down his throat like fire.

His eyes squeezed shut.

His teeth clenched.

"Fuck!"

The roar burst out of him before he could stop it.

He stood there breathing hard, bottle in hand, chest rising and falling.

Then, almost with disgust, he looked down at it.

"No," he muttered.

"No. You are better than this."

He set the bottle down, reached for one of the crystal glasses, and placed it carefully on the desk.

Then he poured.

Clear liquid caught the light.

He set the bottle aside.

Lifted the glass.

Drank.

Slower this ti.

asured.

Civilized.

Like a general.

He exhaled through his nose.

"Yes," he said quietly. "That is better."

For a mont he stood utterly still.

Then sothing shifted behind his eyes.

The panic did not vanish, but it hardened.

Beca thought.

Cold thought.

He already knew the truth now, whether he wished to or not.

The Ninth and Tenth Armies were not ready. Not truly. They needed more ti—ti he did not have. The Sixth Army would not easily be stripped from the capital; Saint Petersburg would never willingly bare itself to radicals and panic unless forced by catastrophe. Reinforcents would co too slowly, too weakly, or not at all.

Which ant the situation, as it now stood, could not be saved.

Not in Poland.

Not as it was.

He put the glass down.

Then he moved to the door and flung it open.

"Adjutant!"

Boots struck the floor outside at once. A young officer hurried in and snapped to attention.

"Your Excellency?"

Zhilinsky had gone pale, but his voice was steady now in a way it had not been monts before.

"Take this down carefully. These orders are to be copied and transmitted imdiately."

"Yes, Your Excellency."

"We will not hold the Kingdom of Poland as presently arranged. The line is too long, the army too broken, and the enemy too fast."

He took a breath.

"Orders are to be prepared for a staged withdrawal eastward. Headquarters of the forr Second Army will be shifted toward Minsk. Coordination is to be established there with the forming Tenth Army."

The adjutant's eyes widened slightly, but he kept writing.

Zhilinsky went on.

"All officers in the threatened districts are to begin imdiate preparation for denial asures. Railway stock, stores, fuel, telegraph material, depots, workshops, bridges—anything of operational value that cannot be removed is to be destroyed."

The pen paused.

"Your Excellency… destroyed?"

"Yes. Write."

The pen resud.

"Food stores are to be stripped where possible. Livestock driven east. Civilian authorities are to begin evacuation from threatened areas at once. Villages, towns, and estates that cannot be defended are not to be left intact for the Germans. If the population resists, they are to be compelled. They are to understand that remaining in place ans falling under German control. That cannot be permitted."

He was speaking faster now, the words coming with gathering force.

"No shelter. No food. No comfort. Nothing the Germans can use for winter quarters, for supply, for political gain, or for sedition among the Poles. If we cannot hold the land, we will empty it and burn what remains."

The adjutant glanced up despite himself.

"Your Excellency—"

Zhilinsky cut him off.

"This is for Mother Russia. Do you understand? If the Germans want Poland, then they will inherit ash, hunger, and distance. We will pull them inward. Stretch them. Bleed them. Let them co farther and farther from their comfort, just as we drew in Napoleon."

His breathing had quickened again, but now there was a kind of terrible purpose in it.

"Send imdiate warning to the armies operating in Galicia. They are to prepare to withdraw rather than risk encirclent from the north. They are to employ the sa asures. Burn what cannot be carried. Empty what cannot be held. Pull back in order, not in panic."

"Yes, Your Excellency," the adjutant said, writing as fast as he could.

"And another thing."

"Yes, sir?"

"Prepare my personal car."

The adjutant looked up fully now.

"Your Excellency?"

"I will not be caught here if the Germans break through faster than expected. The car is to be ready imdiately."

"Yes, Your Excellency. At once."

The young officer gathered the pages, bowed, and hurried from the room.

The door shut behind him.

For the first ti since morning, a thin thread of relief touched Zhilinsky's chest.

Not hope.

Never that.

But action.

Movent.

Decision.

His career might already be finished. His na might already be ruined. But he would not let the Empire fall in neat order simply because his plans had been shattered. If Poland had to burn so Russia might live, then it would burn.

He reached for the glass again.

This ti his hand was steadier.

Then he turned back toward the desk, where new orders waited to be written—one of them for the armies in Galicia, warning them to pull back at once or risk destruction. He would tell them what they must already suspect: the campaign of swift advance was dead.

What ca now would be longer.

Harsher.

Hungrier.

No longer a war of swift marches and confident offensives drawn neatly across maps, but one of retreat, fire, distance, and survival.

The kind of war Russia had fought before.

The kind of war that devoured n by the hundreds of thousands and ground empires down year after year.

Not weeks.

Not months.

Years.

Years of burned fields and frozen roads, of armies retreating and returning again, of cities emptied and rebuilt, of sons growing into soldiers while the war still raged.

If the Germans believed this campaign would end quickly, they would learn otherwise.

Russia would bleed.

Russia would burn.

But Russia would endure, or so General Yakov Grigoryevich Zhilinsky believed.

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