Chapter 32 The Killing Star Arrives (4)

Style: Historical Author: sharp hatchetWords: 2886Update Time: 24/01/11 22:28:13
When he got up in the morning, Koizumi felt his right eyelid beating non-stop. Having been in China for five years, he has naturally heard the Chinese proverb that a jump in the left eye will bring wealth and disaster in the right eye. However, Koizumizo, who has a university diploma, does not believe this Chinese proverb. He just thinks it is because he did not get a good rest. According to the instructions from his superiors, today, as a second lieutenant officer, Koizumi Zao needs to lead his infantry team to escort several prisoners temporarily detained in the stronghold of Wuhan Special High School to the guidance position of Wuhan Special High School.

This escort operation was a cooperative operation between Wuhan Super High School and the military. Koizumi Zuo was the specific executor of this operation. Koizumi was actually very resistant to this operation because the place designated by the Wuhan Special High School was not far from the area controlled by the national army. If the National Army happens to have troops operating there, his team is likely to have an encounter with the National Army troops, and Koizumi Zuo's team is filled with a large number of recruits. Koizumi Zuo does not think these recruits can withstand it. The soldiers of the national army attacked and killed.

But this operation was not only planned by Wuhan Super High School, but Koizumi's unit was also involved. The orders of superiors must not be violated, but after Koizumi argued hard, his superiors could only hold their noses and mobilized three military trucks and two three-wheeled motorcycles for this operation. With enough mobility, Koizumi no longer worries about encountering the national army. With trucks and motorcycles, at worst, he can just retreat.

After breakfast, Koizumi gathered his soldiers, took the handcuffed and shackled prisoners into the car and left the military camp. Perhaps because there were gun towers and checkpoints along the way, Koizumi was not worried. It was not until the convoy left the area actually controlled by the Japanese army that Koizumi became cautious. The cautious Koizumi did not sit in the cab of the first truck, but sat in the compartment with his soldiers. As the captain of the squad, Koizumi voluntarily sat in the carriage. Not only was he worried about encountering enemy troops, but being in the carriage also made it easier for him to observe the surrounding situation.

After the convoy left the Japanese-controlled area, it soon appeared in a large open field. Koizumi, who had been holding a telescope, relaxed a little at this time. Having led the frontline troops for three years, he knew that it was impossible to conduct an ambush in this kind of terrain, because the biggest problem was the hiding of the ambush personnel. Sure enough, as the convoy drove in this open land, nothing strange happened at all. But just as the convoy rounded the curve in front and entered another open area, gunshots suddenly appeared.

The attackers very cunningly let go of the two motorcycles that had been leading the way, and targeted the leading vehicle where Koizumi was. The bullet fired from a distance accurately penetrated the front windshield of the truck cab and carved a bullet hole in the driver's neck. A bloody arrow shot out from the bullet hole in the driver's neck, instantly dyeing the truck's front windshield red. The co-pilot, who didn't react immediately, realized that the truck had swerved towards the edge of the highway embankment, and then he yelled and reached out to hold the steering wheel.

The co-pilot of the leading truck was trying to steer the skewed truck back to the middle of the road when he heard another gunshot. Fortunately, the second bullet fired was not aimed at the lead car. The second bullet fired by the attacker, this time was aimed at the second truck, and the person who was shot was also the driver. The second truck was not as lucky as the first truck. The co-pilot in the cab of the second truck also wanted to control the steering wheel, but was pierced through the head by the next bullet that entered the cab.

Five bullets were fired in succession, and Koizumi's three trucks stopped on the road one after another. Koizumizo, who had finally reacted completely at this time, jumped out of the back of the truck and kept shouting, instructing his soldiers who got out of the truck to find the location of the attacker. Intuition told him that the attacker must be targeting those prisoners, so Koizumizo did not arrange for his men to remove the prisoners who were handcuffed and shackled from the carriage.

According to experience, Koizumi, who was already lying down under the roadbed, could only determine the general direction of the attacker, but could not determine the attacker's location. But he judged from the gunshots that the attacker should be a sharpshooter and was at least 200 meters away from them. Being able to shoot and hit the target at a distance of 200 meters, there are not many veterans with such marksmanship among the front-line troops of the Japanese army. But after Koizumizo transferred the garrison troops from the front-line troops, he had never encountered such sharpshooters.

But what's even more weird is that after the attacker fired five bullets in a row, there was suddenly no movement. Koizumi Zuo and the others have been waiting under the roadbed for a long time, but the attacker has not seen any new movements. Koizumizo, who is full of suspicion, can only bite the bullet and slowly poke his head out from under the roadbed to observe the road. Opposite situation. At this time, the two motorcycles that opened the road in front had returned, and at this time, gunshots appeared again.

In Koizumi's sight, the first motorcycle rushed down the road with the sound of gunfire. The bloody mist that appeared in Koizumi's sight made him realize that the soldier driving the motorcycle was probably in danger. The second gunshot followed shortly after. The motorcyclist, who was hit by a bullet in the chest, endured the pain and finally gritted his teeth and stopped the motorcycle at the rear of the first truck. Seeing this, Koizumi couldn't help but scream in his heart, because there was a light machine gun in the sidecar of this motorcycle.

At the look of Koizumi, a Japanese veteran suddenly rushed onto the road, risking being hit by bullets, and desperately took out the light machine gun from the sidecar of the motorcycle. This brave veteran was not knocked down by the attacker's bullets, because the attacker in the distance once again became silent. Koizumi, who couldn't guess the reason, felt that the attacker did it on purpose. The other party was deliberately teasing him and others, just like a cat that caught a mouse.

But no matter what, they had now obtained a light machine gun. Koizumi, who saw no movement from the attacker, then directed the other soldiers around him to return to the carriage and retrieve another light machine gun and two grenades. With heavy weapons in hand, Koizumi finally lost his previous panic. Under his command, his soldiers held rifles and began to spread out to the left and right along the roadbed. Koizumi Zuo has now reacted from the panic. He now expects the attacker to shoot again. As long as the attacker fires, he can find out the attacker's location.

Unfortunately, the attacker's reaction made Koizumi very disappointed. The opponent's reaction was the same as that of the guerrillas in the Japanese-controlled areas. They took advantage of one shot and immediately withdrew from the battle and fled. The disappointed Koizumi didn't know at this moment that Tang Cheng, who shot and attacked them, was running quickly in the tunnel with his back bent. Tang Cheng, who had set up here a day in advance, had already used his spare equipment bag storage skills to dig out several tunnels in this wilderness.

After a dozen breaths, Tang Cheng rushed out of the tunnel while quickly adjusting his breathing while raising his gun and aiming at the Japanese troops more than 200 meters away. Tang Cheng, who used the tunnel to change his position, now appeared behind Koizumi and the others, and was 200 meters away. Tang Cheng, who was alone, now faced a situation where the enemy was outnumbered, so he did not use a bolt-action rifle, but used the Garand, which had more ammunition and a higher rate of fire. rifle.

The shooting range of more than 200 meters presents certain difficulties for other shooters. But for Tang Cheng, as long as the triple eyepiece skill is turned on, targets more than 200 meters away will feel as if they are very close at hand. Seeing the Japanese troops hiding under the roadbed, at this time, someone rushed onto the road. Tang Cheng, who had already raised his gun, immediately pulled the trigger. Another sudden bullet fired several Japanese soldiers who rushed onto the road, knocking them to the ground one after another.

Koizumi, who was still under the roadbed, was dumbfounded at this time, because he had already heard the gunshots coming from behind, and the gunshots came one after another, and it didn't seem like there was only one person. Koizumi Zuohe's soldiers hid under the roadbed, originally for the attackers on the opposite side of the local road, but this time the bullets were fired from behind them, which made them not know whether to be careful in front or behind. Tang Cheng, who was lying at the entrance of the tunnel, ignored other things at this moment and just used the fastest speed to shoot out all the bullets in the magazine. The Garand rifle was loaded with eight rounds, but Tang Cheng shot them all out in just a few breaths.

Tang Cheng, who had exhausted all the bullets in the magazine, did not reload the bullets immediately. Instead, he took out a grenade canister from his equipment bag. Facing the Japanese troops who were still in chaos, they quickly fired two grenade grenades before reentering the tunnel. The appearance of the grenade made Koizumi feel furious and wanted to retreat. The previous attacks seemed like chaotic gunfire, but Koizumi didn't think that the attacker was just one person. The grenade that appeared just now is the best proof, and the grenade can hit so accurately, the attackers are definitely not as simple as the Tubal guerrillas.

Koizumi held up his binoculars and looked in the direction he judged. Unfortunately, all he saw in his sight were weeds. A dozen Japanese soldiers scattered on both wings even conducted a detailed search of the wilderness with rifles in accordance with Koizumi's orders, but still found nothing. At this time, Koizumizuo didn't know that the Tangcheng they were searching for was moving rapidly in the 2-meter-deep tunnel beneath their feet.