After the embrace, Wang Zhong said, "When we parted last time, saying 'see you in Plowsonia,' I thought it wouldn't come true."
"How could it not!" laughed Major General Kiriyenko, "Firstly, I was not surrounded, and secondly, I'm a cavalryman! If I were determined to leave my troops behind, I could break out even if the enemy laid a trap in heaven and earth."
Wang Zhong, hearing him mention his own troops, asked, "What about the Seventh Cavalry Army?"
It was Kiriyenko's Seventh Cavalry Army that, when Wang Zhong had lost much of Loktov, had engulfed the enemy, now at the end of their rope, like a tide, and rescued the beleaguered fight group of Rocossov.
This unit was the savior of Wang Zhong's life.
Kiriyenko sighed, "The losses were heavy; they all retreated to the east side of St. Ye Katerina Fortress for reorganization. My boys are all cavalrymen; they are really not suited to meat grinding with Prussians within the city."
Wang Zhong: "That's too bad."