I think he knows what I know.

I think we all know.

We’re not going home.

Dylan closed the journal, set it on the table, walked to the bathroom, and threw up coffee and nothing else.

His body rejecting what his mind was trying to process.

18 American soldiers buried alive, not by enemies, by allies, by the men who were supposed to help them get home.

He rinsed his mouth, went back to the kitchen.

The journal sat there, brown leather and yellowed pages, and Dylan knew he should stop reading, should take this to Vance to base command to someone with authority to handle what this was.

But it was his grandfather in that bunker.

his grandfather with broken fingers.

His grandfather who’d lived through something that command had decided to bury.

Dylan sat down and kept reading.

Dylan called in sick the next morning.

First time in six years of service.

He sat at the card table with Brennan’s journal and read while sunlight moved across the kitchen floor and his phone buzzed with messages he didn’t answer.

The entries after May 9th documented a slow descent into something worse than imprisonment.

Brennan wrote about the Soviets sealing the bunker entrance with concrete, working through the night while the Americans listened from below.

About the ventilation shafts, how they tried to climb up, but the Soviets had welded grates over the tops 30 ft above ground.

about Mercer’s hands, how the broken fingers healed crooked because Russo had nothing to work with except torn strips of shirt for splints.

15.

May 1945.

Walsh died today.

The dysentery combined with starvation.

He was talking to his mother at the end.

Kept apologizing for something over and over.

Said he was sorry he broke her radio.

He was 19.

We buried him in the corner we’ve been using for waste.

Mercer said words over him.

The Lord’s Prayer.

Some of the men cried.

I couldn’t.

I’m too tired to cry.

We’re down to 17.

Dylan stopped, checked the dog tag he’d photographed with his phone yesterday before the site was fully locked down.

Walsh, Edward J.

found near the entrance, right where someone would have set it after burial, a marker for a grave that was also a latrine because there was nowhere else to put a body underground.

He kept reading.

22nd May, 1945.

Soviets came today, opened the entrance, brought food, bread, canned meat, water.

Enough for a week, maybe.

The same colonel from before stood at the top of the stairs.

Didn’t come down, just watched while his soldiers left the supplies.

Mercer asked when we’d be repatriated.

Asked if there was word from American command.

The colonel smiled.

Said soon.

Said these things take time.

Paperwork, coordination between allies.

Said we should be patient.

Then he left.

Sealed the entrance again.

Kuzlowski started laughing after they left.

kept laughing until he couldn’t breathe.

Russo had to sedate him with a sock in his mouth until he calmed down.

Patient.

We should be patient.

It’s been 6 weeks since Germany surrendered.

The entries became sporadic after that.

Days would pass without writing.

When Brennan did write, the careful penmanship had degraded into something hurried, urgent, like he was racing against time or sanity.

3 June 1945.

Mercer’s making plans.

won’t say what kind.

He’s been studying the ventilation shafts, measuring distances, calculating something in his head.

His hands barely work anymore.

The fingers healed wrong.

He can’t make a fist.

But he’s moving around the bunker at night, testing things.

Some of the men think he’s going crazy.

I don’t.

I think he knows what I know.

No one’s coming for us.

The Soviets are never going to let us go.

We witnessed something they can’t allow to become public.

American soldiers who saw Soviet forces executing prisoners of war.

That’s a war crime.

That’s something that could poison Allied relations maybe start a new conflict.

So, we disappear, officially listed as killed in action during the final push.

Our families get telegrams.

We get a bunker in the middle of nowhere.

Mercer’s going to get us out or die trying.

Most of us are going to die anyway.

Dylan’s phone buzzed again.

Hayes, this time the fifth call this morning.

He let it go to voicemail.

Outside, traffic moved through Clarksville.

Normal Tuesday, people going to work, to school, to lives that didn’t include reading about American soldiers being buried alive by their own allies.

He forced himself to keep reading.

8 June 1945.

Three more dead.

Starvation, sickness.

We’ve been eating one meal every two days trying to make the supplies last until the Soviets come back, but they haven’t come back.

It’s been over 2 weeks.

Mercer says that’s deliberate.

Says they’re waiting for us to die.

Easier than execution.

Starvation leaves no bullet holes, no evidence of murder, just American soldiers who got lost in the chaos of wars end and died before anyone found them.

He’s right.

I know he’s right.

We’re down to 14.

10 June 1945.

Russo is organizing the strong ones for Mercer’s plan.

Six of us can still stand, still think clearly.

The rest are too weak, too sick.

They’ll stay below.

Mercer is going to use the ventilation shaft.

We’ve been working on the great using spoons filed to points, scraping at the welds.

It’s taking days, but we’re making progress.

Once we’re through, someone climbs up, gets out, finds American forces, or tries to.

The Soviets might be watching.

Probably are watching.

But Mercer says we’re dead if we stay here.

Might as well die trying.

He can barely hold the spoon with his broken hands.

But he’s been scraping at that great for hours every night.

I think he blames himself for all of this, for getting us captured, for not leaving sooner, for trusting the Soviets.

He doesn’t say it, but I can see it in his face.

He’s going to get out or kill himself trying.

The next entry was dated June 12th, 1945.

The last entry in the journal.

The handwriting was barely legible, scratched across the page like Brennan had been shaking.

12th of June, 1945.

They came back.

We were working on the shaft when we heard vehicles above.

Soviet trucks, heavy equipment.

Mercer told us to get down, stay quiet, but they weren’t interested in us.

They were bringing more prisoners.

We heard them.

German voices begging, pleading.

And then gunfire, methodical, one shot at a time, over and over.

Must have been 50 people, maybe more.

Execution by firing squad, except there was no squad, just one shooter taking his time.

It lasted an hour.

When it was over, we heard the bulldozer burying them right above us, burying German prisoners in a mass grave in the middle of nowhere.

Mercer put his hand over Kslowsk’s mouth.

Kuzlowski was trying to scream.

We all wanted to scream, but we stayed quiet because the Soviets don’t know we’re here anymore.

They’ve forgotten about us or they think we’re already dead.

Either way, we have a chance now.

A slim chance.

Mercer says we go tonight.

The shaft is almost open.

We get out.

We move fast.

We head west.

We find Americans or we die trying.

I’m writing this in case we don’t make it.

In case someone finds this bunker years from now and wants to know what happened.

We’re American soldiers.

28th Infantry Division.

We didn’t desert.

We didn’t abandon our duty.

We got captured and we survived.

And we tried to get home, but our own allies buried us.

Tell our families we tried.

Tell them we didn’t give up.

Corporal James Brennan signing off.

That was it.

No more entries.

Dylan turned the remaining pages, but they were blank.

He sat there for a long time staring at that last line.

Tell our families we tried.

His grandmother had died believing her husband was killed in action in Germany.

Died believing he’d fought bravely and fallen honorably.

The telegram from the War Department had said as much.

Staff Sergeant Robert Mercer killed in action 23rd April 1945 during operations in Germany.

The nation honors his sacrifice.

Except Robert Mercer hadn’t died in April.

He’d survived.

He’d been captured, imprisoned, tortured by allies, sealed underground, and left to starve.

And on June 12th, 1945, he’d tried to escape.

Dylan didn’t know if his grandfather had made it out of that shaft.

Didn’t know if he’d died climbing, died running, or died somewhere in the Kentucky wilderness after Soviet bullets found him.

But he knew one thing for certain.

The Army had lied.

The War Department had lied.

Someone in command had decided that 18 American soldiers were expendable, that whatever they’d witnessed was too dangerous to acknowledge, and that their families deserved nothing but a telegram full of noble lies.

His phone buzzed.

Vance, this time he answered.

Mercer, where the hell are you? Home sick.

Get to base now.

The criminal investigation command is here.

Dylan’s chest went tight.

C.

They’re taking over the bunker site.

Want to interview everyone who went inside yesterday.

That includes you.

She paused.

They’re also asking about missing evidence.

A journal.

Someone saw you carrying something when you came out.

Dylan looked at Brennan’s journal on the table.

Evidence of war crimes.

Evidence of a conspiracy.

Evidence that would destroy careers, ruin reputations, maybe start an international incident even 50 years later.

I don’t know anything about a journal, he said.

Dylan.

Vance’s voice went quiet.

Don’t do this.

Whatever you found, turn it over.

Don’t throw your career away.

I’ll be there in an hour.

He hung up, stood there in his kitchen, weighing options.

He could turn over the journal, let C handle it, trust the system, the same system that had buried 18 soldiers and lied to their families for 50 years, or he could finish what Brennan had started, find out the whole truth, learn what happened after that last entry, discover whether any of them made it out, made it home, made it to safety.

find out what happened to his grandfather.

Dylan made coffee, photographed every page of the journal with his phone, uploaded them to a cloud server.

Then he wrapped the journal back in its oil cloth, put it in a plastic bag, and buried it in his backyard under the oak tree.

Evidence tampering, obstruction of justice, probably a dozen other charges.

He didn’t care.

At 1100 hours, he drove to Fort Campbell and prepared to lie to the Criminal Investigation Command.

The C interview room was deliberately uncomfortable.

Gray walls, metal table, chairs bolted to the floor.

Special Agent Monica Richardson sat across from Dylan with a recorder running, and a file folder that looked too thin for the questions she was about to ask.

Lieutenant Mercer, walk me through yesterday.

What you found, what you touched, what you removed from the site.

Dylan had rehearsed this on the drive over.

Keep it simple.

Stick to observable facts.

Don’t elaborate.

I entered the bunker after the collapse.

Found evidence of American soldiers, dog tags, personal effects, the remains of what looked like a long-term imprisonment.

Did you remove anything? No.

Richardson’s expression didn’t change.

We have a witness who says you were carrying something when you exited.

A book or notebook.

I was carrying my field notebook.

Standard issue.

I was taking notes on the structural integrity.

Can I see that notebook? It’s in my office.

I can retrieve it after we’re done here.

Richardson leaned back.

She was mid-40s, competent, the kind of investigator who’d spent 20 years learning when people were lying.

Dylan kept his face neutral.

You understand the sensitivity of this discovery? She said 18 American soldiers deceased in an undocumented structure on US military property.

This is a potential war crime.

Evidence needs to be preserved.

Chain of custody maintained.

If you removed anything from that site, now’s the time to say so.

I didn’t remove anything.

They stared at each other.

Richardson finally nodded, made a note in her file.

All right, tell me what you observed inside.

Dylan spent the next hour describing the bunker, the layout, the personal effects, the marks on the walls.

He didn’t mention Brennan’s journal or what it contained.

Didn’t mention Soviet involvement or executions or broken fingers.

Just stuck to what C would find when they processed the site themselves.

When Richardson finally let him go, Dylan walked straight to base archives.

The army kept records on everything.

Personnel files, unit histories, casualty reports.

If his grandfather’s unit had been listed as KIA in April 1945, there would be documentation, orders, afteraction reports, witness statements, something that explained how 18 men disappeared and why the army had declared them dead.

The archives occupied a climate controlled building near base headquarters.

Staff Sergeant Carol Winters ran the place, a black woman in her 50s who’d been managing Army paperwork since before Dylan was born.

Need to pull some records, Dylan said.

World War II era, 28th Infantry Division.

Winters looked at him over her reading glasses.

This about the bunker.

Word traveled fast.

Yes.

C was already here, pulled everything related to the casualty reports from April 1945.

She paused.

Sealed it all.

Investigation in progress.

Dylan’s jaw tightened.

There’s got to be other records.

Unit histories, personnel files, operational reports.

Those aren’t sealed yet.

Winters stood up.

What specifically are you looking for? Staff Sergeant Robert Mercer, killed in action, supposedly April 23rd, 1945.

I need his casualty report, the witness statements, anything that documents how he died.

Winters disappeared into the stacks.

Dylan waited, watching dust drift through sunlight, wondering how many secrets were filed away in buildings like this.

How many lies preserved on acid-free paper, organized by date and catalog number, waiting for someone to dig deep enough to find the truth? Winters came back with a box.

Personnel file for Robert Mercer, casualty documentation, unit history for Company B, 28th Infantry.

She set it on the table.

You’ve got 2 hours before I have to lock up.

Dylan opened the personnel file first.

His grandfather stared up at him from a black and white photograph.

Young, serious, wearing the uniform with careful pride.

Born 1917, Pittsburgh, enlisted 1942.

Carpenter before the war.

Promoted to staff sergeant March 1945.

The casualty report was one page typed official stamped with war department seals.

Staff Sergeant Robert Mercer serial number 33185479 company B 28th Infantry Division killed in action 23 April 1945 during patrol operations in the vicinity of VHimar Germany.

Remains not recovered due to tactical situation.

Next of Kin notified 3rd of May 1945.

remains not recovered.

That was the phrase they used when bodies were lost, destroyed, unidentifiable.

It explained why there had been no funeral, no grave, nothing for his grandmother to visit except a name on a memorial wall.

Except it was a lie.

The remains had been recovered.

They’d been sealed in a bunker and hidden for 50 years.

Dylan pulled the unit history.

Company B had been part of the final push into Germany, advancing through Theia in April 1945.

The history documented every major engagement, every casualty, every decoration.

On April 21st, 1945, the company had been ordered to conduct reconnaissance in force near the town of Bad Burka, probing for German defensive positions.

18 men hadn’t returned from that patrol.

The afteraction report was clinical.

Patrol encountered enemy resistance, sustained casualties, achieved mission objectives.

Enemy forces withdrew during the night.

Patrol personnel listed as killed in action.

Presumed buried by enemy prior to withdrawal.

Presumed buried.

Presumed dead.

No bodies recovered.

No witnesses.

Just an assumption that made the paperwork easier.

Dylan found the patrol roster.

18 names.

His grandfathers at the top.

and next to each name the same notation K I A remains not recovered.

He photographed everything with his phone.

The casualty reports, the roster, the afteraction report.

Then he kept digging.

The box contained letters, official correspondence between company B’s commander and higher headquarters discussing the lost patrol.

Dylan read through them looking for anything that didn’t fit the official narrative.

He found it in a letter dated May 15th, 1945, week after Germany surrendered.

From a Captain Theodore Walsh, Eddie Walsh’s father, Dylan realized to the war department.

Sir, I am writing to request clarification regarding my son, Private Edward J.

Walsh, reported killed in action 23rd April 1945.

I have received information from another family member of the patrol that there may be confusion about the circumstances of the casualties.

I am requesting any additional information available about my son’s death and the disposition of his remains.

The response dated June 2nd, 1945 was brief.

Dear Captain Walsh, the War Department confirms that your son, Private Edward J.

Walsh was killed in action during combat operations in Germany.

Due to the tactical situation at the time, remains could not be recovered.

The department extends its deepest sympathies for your loss.

No further information is available.

No further information is available.

The bureaucratic wall.

Dylan kept reading.

Captain Walsh had written again and again.

Five letters over the next three months.

Each one more desperate.

each one asking the same questions.

Why were there no witness statements? Why had no one from the patrol survived to describe what happened? Why was the war department refusing to provide details? The final letter was dated September 1945.

Sir, I have now written five times requesting information about my son’s death.

I am a career officer with 20 years of service.

I have connections throughout the army.

I know how casualty investigations work.

I know when something is being hidden.

I am formally requesting a full investigation into the circumstances surrounding the patrol of 21st April 1945 and the deaths of 18 men from Company B, 28th Infantry Division.

I have reason to believe these men may not have died as reported.

If I do not receive a satisfactory response, I will take this matter to Congress.

The response came from a colonel in the War Department.

Different tone, no sympathy, just facts.

Captain Walsh, your requests have been reviewed.

The circumstances surrounding your son’s death are documented and confirmed.

The patrol was ambushed, sustained casualties, and the tactical situation prevented recovery of remains.

This is a tragic but common occurrence in combat operations.

Further inquiries into this matter will be considered insubordinate and potentially harmful to army morale during the demobilization period.

The matter is closed.

Any further correspondence regarding this issue will result in disciplinary action.

They’d threatened him.

An officer asking questions about his own son’s death and the war department had threatened him into silence.

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