In a dense, forgotten forest in Chernigiv, time seemed to stand still. Moss-covered pines towered silently as damp leaves muffled every step. Hidden among the trees, locals stumbled upon something chilling—a rusted tank, half-buried, its turret still marked with the number “12.” It didn’t belong there. It was as if history itself had been sleeping beneath the roots.
The forest held its breath as one man stepped forward. He touched the cold steel, his hand brushing over a deep gash in the tank’s side. The hatches were sealed tight—until they found a letter inside. Faded, handwritten. A final goodbye.
Ivan Kolosov had steered the damaged tank off the road after an ambush. His comrade Vasili died instantly. Wounded and alone, Ivan buried him in a birch glade. Knowing he wouldn’t survive, he wrote to Varia, his beloved. He told her of their sacrifice, of peace in his final hours, and of hope—that love like theirs would endure.
“You were always my strength,” he wrote. “Your eyes will never grow old.”
He urged her to live, to love again. And to remember the song of the three tankers.
Their story, hidden in silence, now echoes through the forest.