Devil's Army

Chapter 148 Wulang Fights the Reinforcements

After receiving the order, Wulang quickly dispatched troops to move along the road from Rehe to Fengtian.

The main force temporarily rested by the roadside, and he personally led a small team to survey the terrain along the road and look for ambush points.

Finally, he chose a relatively narrow area with withered weeds more than one person tall on both sides as the ambush section.

He buried some mines and explosive packs at that intersection, but the detonating mines were buried on the road a hundred meters away.

He had two pictures drawn, one of which was a dog in Japanese military uniform kneeling on the ground begging for mercy from his team members. He also asked the squadron leader, who had learned some Japanese from Wen Lang, to write in Japanese on the picture: "I am a Japanese dog, please spare me."

He pasted the two paintings on two wooden boards, which were inserted into the soil and connected to the fuse of the detonating mine from below.

He asked people to collect some scrap iron from nearby villages. He also bought a lot of rotten iron from a blacksmith shop in a nearby town. He also asked the owner of the blacksmith shop to break some of the large iron blocks received from the village into small pieces.

Wu Lang had laid a large area of ​​mines, real or fake, on this five-kilometer-long road, and had ambushed a group of team members with relatively accurate shooting skills in the weeds on both sides.

Lieutenant Colonel Takeda sat in the car with his eyes closed. He was very angry with this devilish army. He had led the Imperial Japanese Army to advance straight into the Northeast Army, and the Northeast Army was defeated. Victory was in sight, and the medal of honor was waving at him. Who knew that a phone call would call him back to suppress the bandits.

If he surrounded this devilish army, he would kill them all, leaving no one alive. Only in this way could he relieve his anger.

Lieutenant Colonel Takeda closed his eyes and fantasized in the car, when suddenly the convoy braked suddenly and stopped.

He opened his lazy eyes and asked the adjutant next to him: "What's going on?"

"I don't know, the convoy stopped suddenly." The adjutant answered truthfully.

"Go and see what happened?" Lieutenant Colonel Takeda said and closed his eyes again.

The adjutant walked to the front of the team and asked the two soldiers at the front, "What happened?"

The two soldiers pointed ahead. The adjutant looked in the direction the two soldiers pointed and saw two wooden boards in front of him. On the boards were a picture of a dog wearing their military uniform, kneeling on the ground and begging for mercy from a Chinese soldier. There was also a line of words written in Japanese next to it: I am a Japanese dog, spare me.

The adjutant was so angry that he kicked the two wooden boards away, then turned around and slapped the two soldiers next to him hard, cursing, "Bag!" He wanted to curse something else, but he seemed to hear the hissing sound of a burning fuse.

Before he could see clearly what was happening, two explosions were heard, and he and several Japanese soldiers nearby were blown away on the spot.

Before the other Japanese soldiers could react, the mines and explosive packs buried about a hundred meters underground exploded together after being ignited by the two fuse mines.

The huge shock wave generated by the explosion directly threw four trucks on the path, along with the Japanese soldiers in the trucks and the Japanese soldiers walking on both sides, to all directions.

Lieutenant Colonel Takeda was startled by the huge explosion and hurriedly got out of the car and walked to the front of the troops to take a look. What he saw was horrible. Three of the four trucks were overturned on the side of the road, and one was overturned on the road. The broken limbs of the imperial soldiers were flying everywhere. There were also many injured imperial soldiers sitting, lying, or lying on the ground.

"Engineers, engineers, clear the mines quickly," roared Lieutenant Colonel Takeda.

Four engineers carrying mine detectors quickly ran over from the team and started clearing mines.

The mine detectors of the four engineers kept beeping, and they also kept sticking small red flags into the ground.

Just when the Japanese's attention was focused on the four mine-clearing engineers, a series of gunshots rang out in the grass by the roadside.

The Japanese soldiers near the roadside fell to the ground one after another. Those who were not shot immediately lay down and fired back into the bushes.

The gunfire in the bushes stopped and they began to retreat.

A Japanese lieutenant waved his command knife with a blue tassel towards the grass, and a small group of Japanese soldiers immediately rushed into the grass and chased the small group of enemy troops.

In the grass, the Japanese found an open space with the weeds cut away, and more than ten or twenty enemy soldiers were lying opposite the open space.

The Japanese soldiers immediately lay down or crouched and fired at the enemy troops.

The shooting skills of this group of Japanese soldiers were really good. The more than ten or twenty people lying in front were all shot quickly. But the strange thing was that this group of enemy soldiers did not fire back a single shot from beginning to end.

The Japanese squad leader waved his hand, and the team of Japanese soldiers slowly moved over.

When he got close to the enemy troops, the Japanese squad leader was so angry that his lungs almost exploded. There were no enemy troops at all, only twenty piles of weeds covered in military uniforms.

At this time, intensive gunfire was heard from both sides and the front of the open space, and grenades were thrown out from time to time.

More than ten minutes later, all the more than 40 Japanese soldiers in this small team received their lunch boxes.

Hu Facai and the members of the third squadron emerged from the bushes on three sides.

"Captain, this is a great idea." A team member said with a thumbs up.

"Hurry up and put on the Japanese's clothes." Hu Facai patted the weeds on his body, walked forward, took off the clothes of a Japanese soldier and put them on.

More than 40 other team members also put on the Japanese's clothes, took the grenades from them, and walked towards the path.

Since the members of Hu Facai's third squadron were all using Japanese weapons, when they annihilated this small group of Japanese soldiers, the Japanese soldiers in the alley thought that they were the ones destroying the enemy. So when Hu Facai and his men, who were wearing Japanese military uniforms, approached the alley, the Japanese soldiers were not on guard.

Hu Facai and his men threw all the grenades at the Japanese soldiers on the path and quickly retreated. When the Japanese soldiers came to their senses, there was no one in the bushes.

The Japanese lieutenant ordered two machine guns to fire into the bushes until the magazines were empty.

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