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December 10th, 1944. A casualty clearing station, Bastogne, Belgium. The medic's hands trembled as he unwrapped the field dressing from the wounded paratrooper's leg. Steam rose from the infected wound in the frozen air of the makeshift aid station. Sergeant Robert Hayes had seen gangrene before—the telltale smell, the discolored flesh that meant amputation or death. But today, something was different. He reached for a small glass vial from his medical kit, barely larger than his thumb. The label read "Penicillin G - 100,000 units." Hayes had never heard of it. Neither had most combat medics. The clear liquid inside looked unremarkable, almost like water. But headquarters had issued specific orders: inject this into infected wounds, regardless of how hopeless they appeared. Hayes prepared the syringe with practiced efficiency, though doubt gnawed at him. How could something produced in what looked like ordinary milk bottles back in some American factory possibly save lives that sulfa drugs couldn't? The wounded soldier winced as the needle found muscle. Within hours, the infection would begin to retreat. #ww2unseen #history