Chapter 429: Staying in the Ward
The officer took Borisova to the door of the ward, then stopped, and said politely: "This is the general's ward, please come in yourself, I will not disturb you." Pen @ fun @ pavilion wWw. ļ½ļ½ļ½Uļ½Eć After saying that, he raised his hand and saluted, then turned around and strode away.
After Borisova and the other officers left, she pushed open the door and walked in.
As soon as she entered the door, Borisova saw a man wearing a mask who was taking Rokossovsky's blood pressure. Hearing someone push the door in, the doctor and Rokossovsky looked at the door at the same time.
"Who are you?" "You're here!" The voices of the doctor and Rokossovsky rang out in the ward at the same time. The former's tone was full of dissatisfaction with the intruder; The latter's tone was full of surprise after seeing the intruder clearly.
As soon as the doctor spoke, Borisova heard that it was a female doctor, and she looked at the other man warily without saying a word. When the female doctor saw the uninvited guest standing at the door and did not speak, she became more and more annoyed, and she said unceremoniously to the other party: "This is the special care ward, whoever allows you to come in casually, you give me out immediately, otherwise I will call someone!" ā
"I'm not going out." Borisova was arrested at the headquarters of the Ministry of Internal Affairs today, and she was already holding back an evil fire in her heart, but at this moment, seeing this female doctor indiscriminately angry at herself, her stubborn temper also came up, she held her head high and said unconvinced: "If you have the ability, you can call someone to drive me out!" ā
Seeing such a tense scene, Rokossovsky quickly coughed and raised his hand to stop the two from continuing to argue. He first said to the female doctor: "Comrade doctor, this is my friend Borisova, who came from the Leningrad District to visit me. Then, he whispered to Borisova, "Borisova, you are here, the transfer was very sudden today, and I didn't have time to inform you, it must have taken a lot of trouble for you to find here." ā
Hearing that the person who came was a friend of Rokossovsky, the female doctor regretted her impulsiveness just now, she walked up to Borisova, took off her mask, took the initiative to stretch out her hand, and said generously: "My name is Tatiana, I am a military doctor in the hospital, I was wrong just now, please forgive me!" ā
Seeing that the other party took the initiative to admit her mistake, Borisova was not a stingy person, she reached out and held the other party's hand, and said politely: "I was also a little impulsive just now, please forgive me!" ā
Seeing that the two women had reconciled, and the stone that Rokossovsky was hanging in his throat finally fell to the ground, he had time to ask Borisova: "Borisova, how did you find here?" ā
"The commissar of the military hospital only knew that the new hospital was near the Lubyanka, but where it was located, he did not know." Sitting on a chair next to Rokossovsky's bedside, Borisova briefly described how she got here: "When I got out of the subway station, I searched everywhere, and it really got me here." ā
"Oh my God," Tatiana couldn't help but interject when she heard this, "There are two firing points at the entrance of the hospital, and as long as the fighters on duty find a suspicious person approaching, they can shoot directly without warning." It's amazing that you've made it here safe and sound. ā
"Tatiana, it's not what you think." Borisova looked at the female military doctor with whom she had an argument a few minutes ago, and said faintly: "As soon as I walked into the grass, I was arrested by the plainclothes of the Ministry of Internal Affairs who followed me, and then I was detained in the headquarters building of the Ministry of Internal Affairs for more than an hour. Fortunately, the other party found out my identity and released me, and at the same time, the person in charge sent the plainclothes person who arrested me to personally send me to the hospital. ā
"I see, it really scares me to death." Tatiana raised her hand and patted her chest repeatedly, and said nervously: "As far as I know, in the past, plainclothes officers of the Ministry of Internal Affairs have also caught people who entered the hospital area without permission. ā
"Caught before?" When Borisova heard this, she couldn't help but ask curiously: "What happened to those people?" ā
"Who knows," Tatiana said, shaking her head, "Anyway, they will directly disappear from the world, and no one will see them again, so it is estimated that they are more than lucky." ā
When Rokossovsky heard this, his heart suddenly rose to his throat, and he grabbed Borisova's smooth and delicate little hand mercilessly, and asked nervously: "Borisova, when you were locked up at the headquarters of the Ministry of Internal Affairs, the people of the Ministry of Internal Affairs did not embarrass you, right?" ā
Borisova raised her hand and patted the back of Rokossovsky's hand lightly twice, and said softly: "Koschika, don't worry, I'm fine, just locked me up for more than an hour and didn't do anything to me." ā
"Ahem, cough," seeing the intimacy between Borisova and Rokossovsky, Tatiana quickly coughed twice, and while cleaning up the things on the bedside table, she said: "Comrade General, your blood pressure has been measured, you can rest well." By the way, you have an injury and can't do strenuous exercise, so I'll send a nurse over and scrub your body later. ā
"No need, Tatiana." Without waiting for Rokossovsky to make a statement, Borisova preemptively said: "You don't have to send a nurse later, I'll help Koschika scrub her body." ā
"That's right, that's right." Rokossovsky, who was lying on the bed, also nodded again and again and said: "Comrade military doctor, you don't have to send someone here, when I was in the military hospital over there before, it was Borisova who wiped my body every day." ā
Tatiana walked to the door, suddenly stopped, turned to Borisova and said, "You don't have to go back tonight, you can stay here!" ā
When Borisova heard Tatiana say this, she immediately blushed, she glanced at Rokossovsky who was lying on the hospital bed, and then muttered: "It's not convenient! ā
"There's nothing inconvenient about it." Tatiana grinned, "It's normal for a wife to live with her husband. I have the right to arrange for you to stay here, with a couch in the house, and you can sleep on the couch at night. ā
Tatiana was the speaker unintentionally, and Borisova was the listener's intention, and she hurriedly waved her hand to defend herself: "Comrade military doctor, you misunderstood, I am not his wife, but only his friend." When she got to the back, her voice was barely audible.
"It's all the same," Rokossovsky's heart was originally hanging in his throat, but who knew that Tatiana actually said reasonably: "Even if you are not his wife, you can live here." After all, it's wartime, so a lot of things can't be measured by pre-war standards. With that, she winked at Rokossovsky and walked out of the room.
Seeing Tatiana leave the ward, Borisova also quickly stood up and said in a bit of a panic: "Koschika, I'll prepare hot water for you now, help you scrub your body, I'm going home, and I'll go to work tomorrow." ā
Rokossovsky hurriedly grabbed her hand and said affectionately: "Didn't you hear that the female military doctors all let you stay?" Why don't leave tonight and stay here! ā
Borisova's face had already returned to normal, but when she heard Rokossovsky say this, she suddenly turned red again. She broke free of Rokossovsky's hand and walked briskly into the bathroom in the ward.
Not long after, Borisova walked out of the bathroom with a basin of hot water and came to the hospital bed. Then, as usual, the quilt was lifted and Rokossovsky was wiped with a damp towel.
Perhaps Rokossovsky thought that he almost lost Borisova today, so he behaved a little differently than usual, lying on the bed while Borisova was wiping her body, stretching out his groping hand and roaming around her body wantonly. Borisova's cheeks were red with shame, she just glared at him fiercely, and then went back to work.
But soon the side effects came out, and Rokossovsky's underneath quickly reacted, and instantly became hard. Borisova gently twitched Xiao Xiaoluo with a towel, then took a sip and scolded with a smile: "Your injuries are so serious, you are still thinking about this." ā
Rokossovsky coughed in embarrassment, and hurriedly defended himself: "No way, who made you look so beautiful, this is all an instinctive reaction." As he spoke, he grabbed Borisova's arm and pulled it in front of him.
Borisova was afraid that if she tried too hard, the wound on Rokossovsky's body would burst, so she lay down beside him half-pushed and half-on, looked up at him, raised her hand to touch his face, and said softly: "Koschika, you have an injury now, and the doctor also said that you can't exercise vigorously, so you should lie down obediently!" When you're healed, I'll give myself to you, okay? ā
Although he knew that Borisova was reasonable, Rokossovsky still looked at Borisova in his arms with hatred, unwilling, but there was nothing he could do. If her injuries weren't as serious as they are now, she would have been taken down a long time ago.
"Koschika," Borisova was from the past, could not guess what Rokossovsky was thinking, and quickly changed the topic: "You tell me about the battlefield!" ā
As soon as Borisova mentioned the battlefield, Rokossovsky immediately thought of the Jewish regiment he had formed, and hurriedly asked: "By the way, Borisova, you haven't told me yet, what happened to the Jewish regiment in the end?" ā
"What else, of course it was scattered." Borisova sat up straight, looked at Rokossovsky and said: "The Jewish regiment was formed in a short time, and the equipment was poor, so in the face of the crazy attack of the German army, no matter how stubbornly they fought, they could not save the defeat." ā
"The troops were scattered," Rokossovsky said with a particularly complicated feeling when he heard that the units formed by himself had disappeared from the sequence of combat units. There was silence for a long time before he continued: "I guess there may have been quite a few people who were captured by the Germans in battle. ā
When Borisova heard Rokossovsky say this, she suddenly raised her voice: "No, Koschika, I assure you that every soldier of the Jewish Regiment, even if he shoots himself in the head in a desperate situation, will never be a prisoner of the Germans." ā
"Why are you so sure?" Faced with such an overreaction from Borisova, Rokossovsky asked puzzledly.
"Your troops were in Ukraine before, and you should have heard about the fact that when the German troops entered Ukraine, there were groups of Ukrainians dressed in festive costumes and girls holding flowers to welcome the Germans, right?"
"It seems that there is," although Rokossovsky had seen similar posts on the Internet in later generations, he had not easily seen such a situation after arriving in this time and space, and he could not confirm whether this matter was true or false, so in the face of Borisova's question, he could only say vaguely: "Maybe it is German propaganda." ā
"No, it's not propaganda, it's the real thing." Borisova straightened up and said to Rokossovsky with a serious expression: "There are several Jews in my unit who have fled from Ukraine, and they have told me that the Germans, after enjoying the welcoming ceremony prepared by the Ukrainians for them, dragged all the Jews out of the crowd and shot them on the spot, regardless of the fact that not long ago these people regarded them as their liberators." ā
When Rokossovsky heard Borisova say this, he knew in his heart that this might be true, that the fate of Soviet Jews was the most tragic compared to the Jews of other countries, and that when they were captured by the Germans, they were usually executed directly, and they were not even sent to concentration camps. After being silent for a long time, he spoke: "In this way, the Jews and the Germans have a deep blood feud, so when forming troops in the future, you can consider recruiting more Jewish recruits, because they will fight the Germans to the end, and they will never surrender lightly." ā
Borisova did not speak, but continued to scrub Rokossovsky's body. When all this was done, she stood in front of the hospital bed, twisted her fingers and said to Rokossovsky: "I've finished wiping your body, if there is nothing to do, I will go back first, I have to go to work tomorrow, and a lot of work awaits me every day." ā
"Don't go," Rokossovsky said softly: "It's so late now, the subway must have stopped a long time ago, I don't worry about you walking outside alone, it's better to stay." ā
"But ......" Although Borisova was willing to stay, she always felt that there was something wrong with staying here, so she was particularly conflicted.
Seeing that Borisova just said that she was leaving, but did not move under her feet, Rokossovsky's face showed a smile, he raised his hand and gently patted the empty seat on the hospital bed, and said to Borisova: "It's the same to leave from here to work tomorrow morning, and there is a subway directly to your office, which is more convenient than you go home." Come and lie down with me for a while. ā
Borisova hesitated for a while, and finally decided to stay, she walked to the bedside, lay down next to Rokossovsky in a kimono, and told him uneasily: "It's okay for me to stay, but you have to be honest and don't do bad things, understand?" ā