Chapter 1800: Being Chased

This is a combat mode that the enemy and us have long been familiar with.

The invaders' army marched in a long line across the vast fields of China.

The anti-Japanese troops fired a few shots at them and then fled for their lives, and the invaders chased them desperately.

If there was any difference between the blocking or cold-shooting attack led by Chu Tian and other similar battles, it was only that he was ruthless this time, because he brought out ten light machine guns at one time.

This is clearly using regular army weapons to shoot down the guerrillas. How could the Japanese army tolerate this?

When the remaining Japanese scouts who were running in the front reached the hill, they saw that the Chinese army that had fought a fatal blow to their Imperial Japanese Army had already run into the woods. They had no idea how many people were on the other side because they only saw the figure of the Chinese soldier running at the back.

So the Japanese scout chased again, and the Japanese officers and soldiers rushing over from the road also chased.

They vowed that this time they would never let this ruthless Chinese army get away with it.

  But when the Japanese soldiers rushed through the woods and looked forward, they were dumbfounded, because they suddenly found that their opponents were gone!

In front was an open area of ​​three or four hundred meters, and then a relatively high hill. The open area was sparsely covered with weeds and bushes, and there was a puddle of water of moderate size.

In such terrain, they could see even a rabbit running by, but where was the human figure?

Flying? Impossible. Hiding underground? Also impossible.

Their mighty Imperial Japanese Army couldn't fly and hide behind the ground, so how could the Chinese army, which they looked down upon, do so?

The Japanese army's doubts only lasted for a moment, and then they saw clear tire tracks left in the field.

The ruts were not wide, and at first glance they were wooden ruts left by a horse-drawn carriage.

Up until the end of the Anti-Japanese War, it was said that there were only a few hundred cars in the whole of China.

Of course, horse-drawn carriages can also be equipped with rubber tires, which ordinary people call "rubber wheels."

The rubber tires are very wide, but the ruts right in front of these Japanese soldiers are not.

  You want to ask why?

The Chinese do want to use rubber wheels, or rubber tires, but that’s just a waste of time!

At this point, the Japanese army finally understood why the Chinese army dared to fire at them with machine guns. It turned out that they were using the terrain to hide a carriage behind the woods.

No matter how slow a carriage runs, it is still faster than a person. By the time the Imperial Japanese Army caught up with them, the people in the carriages had run even farther away and disappeared from their sight. They must have run behind the hill ahead.

A Japanese officer came up to him breathlessly, but he just took a quick glance and understood the current situation.

But could they let this Chinese team, which had caused heavy damage to their convoy, get away?

The answer is of course not!

Then the Japanese officer pointed his command knife forward, and the Japanese soldiers continued to chase forward. However, when they reached the top of the hill again, panting, they saw the Chinese army.

But at this time, people were no longer in the fields, but were riding horses on the road.

And just like what they saw the first time, they saw the person's back again.

  At this point, the Japanese army didn't even bother firing their guns, because they estimated that the last horse-drawn carriage carrying the Chinese troops was about seven or eight hundred meters away from them!

When Chu Tian brought the machine gunner and the assistant gunner back to their starting point, the soldiers looked at Chu Tian and his men in surprise as they got off the carriage, while the four carriages ran away along the road.

What was going on? Chen Hanwen, who stayed behind, led his men out of the woods to greet them.

  But when they got closer, they saw that these people who participated in the battle were all full of energy when they went out, but now they were all grinning and groaning, and there was even one who was lying in the weeds on the road and vomiting!

How miserable is that vomiting? It is even more miserable than drinking too much and vomiting bitter bile and sweat the next day!

Looking at their bodies, most of them had their clothes wet and soaked with water!

"What's going on?" Chen Hanwen asked.

"It was the shaking of the carriage." Hou Kanshan replied.

Chen Hanwen suddenly realized.

Judging from the way Chu Tian and the others were, it was definitely not because of the shaking of the carriage. As for the water on their bodies, it must have been because they had been riding in a water puddle.

"Hurry up and get to the battlefield. We'll talk later if you have anything to say! Clean up all your footprints so that the Japanese won't see them when they catch up with us!" Chu Tianxia ordered, even though he was also grinning.

In fact, Chu Tian’s style of play is still very risky.

The reason for the risk was that he did not check the wilderness where the carriage was going to run. Of course, it was not his fault, as he did not have time and the Japanese army would arrive soon.

The wilderness seems flat from a distance, but when you look closely you can see that it is full of potholes. If it is just a war horse, it can certainly run through it. If the potholes are not too big, a carriage can also run through it, but the problem is that the carriage is too bumpy.

After they got on the carriage, it started moving.

All of them had to take care of their weapons and not let them fly out, nor did they let themselves fall off the carriage. When a person was sitting in the carriage and it passed over a pothole, the person would be thrown into the air and then fall heavily down. And when passing over the pothole, they would have to repeat this feeling of flying into the sky and then falling into the ground again.

  As the saying goes, only those who have suffered know the pain. The carriage shook them so much that they felt like their internal organs were turned upside down!

Anyone who has studied physiology knows that the human body's buffering has an order.

Looking from the bottom up, it starts from the arch of the foot and then to the human spine. These bones and muscles can act as a buffer when a person falls from a height.

But what if a person lands on the butt instead of the toes? Then the toes, or the arches, will not work, and only the spine will work.

  And if a person is lying down and is thrown up and then falls down, the spine will not be able to play a cushioning role. If that happens, his own weight will definitely make him vomit blood!

The battle is not over yet. In fact, the previous battle was just a sudden impulse of Chu Tian. The next battle will come soon!

  Chen Hanwen then understood why the four horse-drawn carriages of his company ran away. It was because they were afraid that the Japanese troops who would arrive later would find no tire tracks on the road and become suspicious!

"Hurry up and wipe off your footprints!" Chen Hanwen ordered the soldiers who followed him.

As for Chu Tian and his men who had just returned from the battle, there was no hope for them. No matter whether they were machine gunners or ammunition handlers, they all staggered to pick up their weapons, and the result was that the machine gun became a "crutch".

Chen Hanwen and other soldiers wiped out their traces on the road. When he looked up at Chu Tian and his men heading towards the woods, he saw their backs leaning on their crutches and supporting each other. How could this look like a victory? It looked more like a group of defeated soldiers!

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