Chapter 1668 Lubyanka Military Hospital (Part 1)

Style: Historical Author: smear memoryWords: 4103Update Time: 24/01/18 08:44:36
Sokov regained consciousness on the third day after the operation. He opened his hazy eyes and found that everything around him was white, the white ceiling, white walls, and even the quilt on his body was white.

He closed his eyes and thought for a while, remembering that on his way to the front with the guard platoon, he met an engineering team at a crossing. The leader of the team told him that there were landmines laid by the German army on the road ahead, and enthusiastically Please go to the Taoist room next to you to rest.

However, when he was in the room, he found a suspicious suitcase, and there was a ticking sound from the clock inside. When he realized that there might be a bomb inside, he jumped out of the window. Unexpectedly, the bomb exploded just as he took off... He had no memory of what happened afterwards.

What Sokov didn't know was that the blast of the explosion threw him onto a nearby railway. Even when the staff came to rescue him, he instinctively wanted to pull out his pistol and shoot at the opponent.

He fell into a coma and was quickly taken back to Kremenchug by his staff, where he received emergency treatment. Shortly after the operation, Zhukov personally accompanied him by plane back to Moscow. Under Stalin's personal care, he was admitted to a military hospital with good medical conditions near Lubyanka.

This is an underground military hospital, located on the square opposite the famous Ministry of Internal Affairs building. From the outside, it looks like a container inserted diagonally into the ground. Enter through the guard post at the door and walk fifty meters along the corridor. , the vision will suddenly open up and you will see the wide outpatient hall. The ward where Sokov is hospitalized is located on the second negative floor below the outpatient hall. Although it is more than ten meters underground, there is no need to worry about stuffiness due to the complete ventilation system.

Despite the fact that the German army is now incapable of bombing Moscow, Zhukov still found Stalin out of his relationship with Sokov and asked him to arrange for Sokov to be admitted to the safest military hospital, where he would conduct follow-up treatment. treat.

Sokov opened his eyes again and tried to sit up to see where this place was. Unexpectedly, the moment he moved, he caused huge pain in the wound, which made him groan. His voice alerted a nurse sitting next to him. She came over to take a look and found that Sokov had opened his eyes. She couldn't help but exclaimed: "Comrade General, you are awake."

Before Sokov could say anything, she turned and ran out of the ward.

A few minutes later, seven or eight medical staff came into the ward. They had a clear division of labor. Those who measured blood pressure and those who measured body temperature were busy for a while. An elderly doctor bent down and asked Sokov politely: "Comrade General, how do you feel now?"

Sokov felt the sharp pain coming from the wound and replied in a weak voice: "I feel pain all over my body."

"This is normal, Comrade General." The doctor replied: "You were sent to our hospital only after you were seriously injured. Although you have woken up now, the condition of your injury is still not optimistic. It is very painful to feel normal."

Sokov analyzed the environment here and the neatly dressed doctors and felt that it was not the front line, so he asked tentatively: "Where am I?"

"Comrade General, you are now at the military hospital in Lubyanka." The doctor replied with a smile: "You will receive good treatment here."

When he heard the word Lubyanka, Sokov instinctively thought of the Ministry of Internal Affairs and couldn't help but tremble all over. The doctor noticed his strange behavior and asked with concern: "Comrade General, where is your wound hurting?"

"It's not the wound that hurts." Sokov shook his head slightly and asked a very stupid question: "Lubyanka? Is it the Lubyanka in Moscow?"

"This is natural, Comrade General." When the doctor heard Sokov's question, he couldn't help but replied with a smile: "Where else can there be a Lubyanka except in Moscow."

Sokov tried not to think about the intimidating place name Lubyanka, but asked cautiously: "Since this is Moscow, can you notify my family members to come visit?"

"Your family members are in Moscow?"

"Yes, working as a medic in the weapons and equipment department."

"Oh, your family member is a military doctor?!" The doctor's face showed an unexpected expression: "I really didn't expect that he was traveling with us. Comrade General, don't worry, I will report this matter to the dean and political commissar immediately , after getting their permission, you can notify your family members to visit you."

After examining Sokov, the medical staff left one after another, leaving only the nurse who Sokov saw when he opened his eyes. The nurse came to Sokov's bedside, bent down and said with a smile: "Comrade General, I am the nurse Vera who is responsible for taking care of you. If you need my help for anything, please give me whatever you want."

"Are my injuries serious?" Sokov asked, tentatively sitting up. But his weak body made what was originally a simple movement make him feel dizzy. There were many black dots floating in front of his eyes. The head he just raised fell weakly on the pillow.

"Lie down, lie down, Comrade General." Seeing Sokov's reckless behavior, Vera hurriedly stretched out her hand to hold his head, and said in a panic: "Your body is too weak and you still need to rest. Don't move casually, lest you open the wound."

Sokov lay quietly on the hospital bed, looking at Vera who had just sat down by the bed, and asked feebly: "How many days have I been in a coma?"

"Three days!"

Sokov thought that on the day he was wounded, the troops of the 254th and 300th Divisions had broken through the defense line of the German 1st Army and were advancing south. If nothing else happens, they should be attacking Alexandria at the moment.

Thinking of this, he asked again: "How is the situation on the front line?"

"What's the situation on the front line?" Vera was stunned when he heard Sokov's question, and then asked: "Comrade General, which front do you want to know about?"

"Did our army break through the Dnieper River defense line?"

"Of course we broke through, Comrade General." Vera said happily: "The first to break through the enemy's defense line was the grassland front army, which was least favored by everyone before the war."

"Why don't you think highly of the Grassland Front Army?"

"Needless to say, the Prairie Front Army is just a reserve front army, and its combat effectiveness is definitely not comparable to that of the regular front army." Vera said: "But I didn't expect that from the beginning of the Battle of Kursk to now, they have achieved remarkable results. The record. Especially the 27th Army under the front has a brilliant record. Not only did it liberate Belgorod, but it was also the first to rush into Kharkov, which is really amazing."

When the Soviet Intelligence Agency publishes battle reports, for the sake of confidentiality, it often only publishes the numbers of units with meritorious service, or generally speaking, the units of a certain general. Therefore, even Vera, who often learns about the war ahead through newspapers and radio, does not She knew that the general lying in front of her was the commander of the 27th Group Army as she said.

"Haha," Sokov laughed dryly twice and asked Vera: "Then our army captured Alexandria and Kirovgrad?"

Sokov regained consciousness on the third day after the operation. He opened his hazy eyes and found that everything around him was white, the white ceiling, white walls, and even the quilt on his body was white.

He closed his eyes and thought for a while, remembering that on his way to the front with the guard platoon, he met an engineering team at a crossing. The leader of the team told him that there were landmines laid by the German army on the road ahead, and enthusiastically Please go to the Taoist room next to you to rest.

However, when he was in the room, he found a suspicious suitcase, and there was a ticking sound from the clock inside. When he realized that there might be a bomb inside, he jumped out of the window. Unexpectedly, the bomb exploded just as he took off... He had no memory of what happened afterwards.

What Sokov didn't know was that the blast of the explosion threw him onto a nearby railway. Even when the staff came to rescue him, he instinctively wanted to pull out his pistol and shoot at the opponent.

He fell into a coma and was quickly taken back to Kremenchug by his staff, where he received emergency treatment. Shortly after the operation, Zhukov personally accompanied him by plane back to Moscow. Under Stalin's personal care, he was admitted to a military hospital with good medical conditions near Lubyanka.

This is an underground military hospital, located on the square opposite the famous Ministry of Internal Affairs building. From the outside, it looks like a container inserted diagonally into the ground. Enter through the guard post at the door and walk fifty meters along the corridor. , the vision will suddenly open up and you will see the wide outpatient hall. The ward where Sokov is hospitalized is located on the second negative floor below the outpatient hall. Although it is more than ten meters underground, there is no need to worry about stuffiness due to the complete ventilation system.

Despite the fact that the German army is now incapable of bombing Moscow, Zhukov still found Stalin out of his relationship with Sokov and asked him to arrange for Sokov to be admitted to the safest military hospital, where he would conduct follow-up treatment. treat.

Sokov opened his eyes again and tried to sit up to see where this place was. Unexpectedly, the moment he moved, he caused huge pain in the wound, which made him groan. His voice alerted a nurse sitting next to him. She came over to take a look and found that Sokov had opened his eyes. She couldn't help but exclaimed: "Comrade General, you are awake."

Before Sokov could say anything, she turned and ran out of the ward.

A few minutes later, seven or eight medical staff came into the ward. They had a clear division of labor. Those who measured blood pressure and those who measured body temperature were busy for a while. An elderly doctor bent down and asked Sokov politely: "Comrade General, how do you feel now?"

Sokov felt the sharp pain coming from the wound and replied in a weak voice: "I feel pain all over my body."

"This is normal, Comrade General." The doctor replied: "You were sent to our hospital only after you were seriously injured. Although you have woken up now, the condition of your injury is still not optimistic. It is very painful to feel normal."

Sokov analyzed the environment here and the neatly dressed doctors and felt that it was not the front line, so he asked tentatively: "Where am I?"

"Comrade General, you are now at the military hospital in Lubyanka." The doctor replied with a smile: "You will receive good treatment here."

When he heard the word Lubyanka, Sokov instinctively thought of the Ministry of Internal Affairs and couldn't help but tremble all over. The doctor noticed his strange behavior and asked with concern: "Comrade General, where is your wound hurting?"

"It's not the wound that hurts." Sokov shook his head slightly and asked a very stupid question: "Lubyanka? Is it the Lubyanka in Moscow?"

"This is natural, Comrade General." When the doctor heard Sokov's question, he couldn't help but replied with a smile: "Where else can there be a Lubyanka except in Moscow."

Sokov tried not to think about the intimidating place name Lubyanka, but asked cautiously: "Since this is Moscow, can you notify my family members to come visit?"

"Your family members are in Moscow?"

"Yes, working as a medic in the weapons and equipment department."

"Oh, your family member is a military doctor?!" The doctor's face showed an unexpected expression: "I really didn't expect that he was traveling with us. Comrade General, don't worry, I will report this matter to the dean and political commissar immediately , after getting their permission, you can notify your family members to visit you."

After examining Sokov, the medical staff left one after another, leaving only the nurse who Sokov saw when he opened his eyes. The nurse came to Sokov's bedside, bent down and said with a smile: "Comrade General, I am the nurse Vera who is responsible for taking care of you. If you need my help for anything, please give me whatever you want."

"Are my injuries serious?" Sokov asked, tentatively sitting up. But his weak body made what was originally a simple movement make him feel dizzy. There were many black dots floating in front of his eyes, and the head he just raised fell weakly on the pillow.

"Lie down, lie down, Comrade General." Seeing Sokov's reckless behavior, Vera hurriedly stretched out her hand to support his head, and said in a panic: "Your body is too weak and you still need to rest. Don't move casually, lest you open the wound."

Sokov lay quietly on the hospital bed, looking at Vera who had just sat down by the bed, and asked feebly: "How many days have I been in a coma?"

"Three days!"

Sokov thought that on the day he was wounded, the troops of the 254th and 300th Divisions had broken through the defense line of the German 1st Army and were advancing south. If nothing else happens, they should be attacking Alexandria at the moment.

Thinking of this, he asked again: "How is the situation on the front line?"

"What's the situation on the front line?" Vera was stunned when he heard Sokov's question, and then asked: "Comrade General, which front do you want to know about?"

"Did our army break through the Dnieper River defense line?"

"Needless to say, the Prairie Front Army is just a reserve front army, and its combat effectiveness is definitely not comparable to that of the regular front army." Vera said: "But I didn't expect that from the beginning of the Battle of Kursk to now, they have achieved remarkable results. The record. Especially the 27th Army under the front has a brilliant record. Not only did it liberate Belgorod, but it was also the first to rush into Kharkov, which is really amazing."