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Volume 2: My Country Chapter 629. Sniper vs. sniper

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    !After slowly entering the city, the commandos realized that they were chasing a fleeing Russian division, and their casualties were quite heavy.  The city was littered with dead Russians, both soldiers and civilians.  They were all killed in shelling throughout the night.

    Heisenberg encountered the ruins of a Russian army machine gun position and was hit directly by a shell.  Two Russian soldiers who had been waiting for the Germans to arrive were blown to pieces, body parts and sandbags scattered everywhere, and their foxhole was now an open crater.

    Gunshots were heard in the distance, and soon, shooting sounds were heard from other directions.  There must have been some Russian soldiers covering other retreating troops.  The commando squad moved cautiously through the city.

    Heisenberg saw several frightened women hiding in a large house with broken windows.  Heisenberg could not stare at them; their heads were wrapped in turbans, and many of them were crying.  They did not speak to the German soldiers and looked like they thought they would be shot at at any moment.

    Similar scenes are everywhere.  On the street, women held dead men or children; an old man wrapped his wife's seriously injured leg; two old women rescued another woman who had lost a foot.

    Many houses are now bomb craters.  It occurred to Heisenberg that the unfortunate residents were probably asleep when the shells hit the houses.  They may be buried underneath, their lives unknown.

    The German soldiers ignored these scenes.  As ordered, they marched through the city in pursuit of the Russian troops.  The trucks they had used as transport the day before were now being followed in a long queue.

    As they approached the center of Lilbok, the commandos heard a fierce exchange of fire.  Heisenberg believed that the Russians were putting up stiff resistance in the city center.

    The commandos saw many German infantry squads hiding in houses near the city center.  Heisenberg walked beside Misha, Edim and Sergeant Keller.  As they approached the houses used as hideouts by the German squads, the commandos saw a pile of corpses lying on the street between the houses.  Eight German soldiers fell together, all shot several times and apparently dead.

    Keller ordered an infantryman to watch the corners and streets.  The soldier complied.

    "Machine gun position, sir! Just in front of the street."

    "How far?" Sergeant Keller asked.

    "About two hundred meters."

    Keller pointed at Edim and Heisenberg: "Go and kill it!"

    "Edim, follow me!" Heisenberg said to his friend.  He put his rifle in front of him and began to crawl forward.  Heisenberg used the pile of corpses as cover, slowly moved forward, and lay down behind the pile of corpses.  He thought it would be difficult for the enemy to spot him because he was wearing the same color uniform as the corpses.

    Edim crawled beside him.  He carefully rested his rifle on a corpse.  Heisenberg had also set up his rifle and was looking through the better Zeiss scope.  He aimed his crosshair at the left machine gunner's chin.

    "They are not exposed too much, can you hit them?"

    Edim smiled: "I think it's okay, Heisenberg, follow my orders one, three, two, one!"

    They both pulled the trigger at the same time.  Heisenberg's bullet was slightly higher, a few centimeters above where he was aiming, and hit the machine gunner in the face.  He forgot that the shooting distance this time was relatively close.  He watched as the Russian soldier's eyes widened and he slumped out of sight.

    "Keep watching!" Heisenberg whispered, and then he saw another Russian soldier getting up and reaching for the machine gun.  Heisenberg shot him in the face.  The Russian soldier's nose disappeared and he pulled back his head.  Edim also fired.

    ¡°I killed the loader!¡± he said excitedly.

    Heisenberg could definitely feel Edim's adrenaline surging, and so could he.  He searched the streets for enemies.

    As Edim continued to monitor the street, Heisenberg turned around and gestured to Sergeant Keller that the enemy's machine gun group had been eliminated by them.

    Keller nodded and ordered the others in the class to rush forward.  They dragged the fallen German soldiers away from the street. Sergeant Keller broke off half of the identification tags hanging around their necks and stuffed them into his pocket.  "Poor fellow!" he murmured.

    Keller asked Heisenberg if he could give him his scope.  Heisenberg handed over his rifle.

    Keller looked through the scope at the streets of the city.  He moved his rifle and surveyed the situation.  "They were hiding in those concrete buildings. But the houses where the commandos were hiding were made of mud and a few brick walls. They didn't stop bullets at all. It was like hiding behind a blanket."

    "Then what should I do, Sergeant?"At that moment, an officer came to Keller's side.  He was a captain with several infantry squads.  Heisenberg estimated that about eight squads of soldiers followed him.  The captain asked Keller how things were going.

    "The enemy is hiding in the concrete buildings in the city center. My people are using these houses as cover to fire on them. We have just taken out a machine gun position in front of the street." He pointed to the Russian machine gun position.

    "Well done, Sergeant! Do you think your men can cover our charge?"

    "No problem, sir!" Keller replied very quickly.  !

    "Very good. As long as the Russian soldiers peek their heads, you will shoot and suppress them!"

    "Yes, sir!" Keller shouted.

    Heisenberg felt that he seemed worried.

    Sergeant Keller turned to Mischa, Edim and Heisenberg: "Let the Russians see how German soldiers fight!"

    "We will do our best, sir!" Edim said, putting his heels together and saluting.  Then, Edim turned to Heisenberg: "You go first, Mr. High-magnification scope."

    As he spoke, he laughed.

    Heisenberg moved forward between the two houses.  The dead soldiers had been removed at this moment, so he stayed close to the wall for concealment, observing the situation around him through the scope on his rifle.  Soon he spotted a Russian soldier.  This guy was hiding in a big house, shooting through the windows.  He was hiding behind a brick wall, so well hidden that only the barrel of his rifle and a small half of his head were exposed.  Heisenberg pulled the trigger.  The Russian soldier either fell or left, disappeared anyway.  Using the same tactic, Heisenberg moved the reticle of his scope across the building, keeping the corner of the house between himself and the rest of the building.  He could hear automatic weapons and rifle fire coming from the building he was targeting and several nearby houses.

    He saw white smoke and scattered bricks as bullets hit the building's exterior.  The glass in all the windows has long been shattered.  A mortar round exploded on the roof.

    Heisenberg's crosshairs fell on a Russian soldier operating a machine gun. Just as he was about to fire, a bullet hit the opponent's chest and he fell.

    Another Russian soldier stepped forward to take the machine gun, and Heisenberg shot him in the forehead.  Then, he fired a shot into the barrel of the machine gun, completely destroying it.  The impact point of the bullet is three centimeters above the crosshair, allowing him to fire each bullet with precision.

    He moved the crosshair again, but there was no obvious target in front of him.  So he motioned for the commandos to move forward.  Sergeant Keller advanced with the captain, who was followed by about two hundred soldiers.  They moved very quickly and rushed to the building and spread out against the wall in front of the door.  The captain motioned for an infantry squad to rush inside.  There was a firefight inside the building, and Heisenberg heard a long-handled grenade being thrown in.

    After the grenade exploded, all the infantrymen poured into the building.  Heisenberg and several other snipers monitored several windows but found no Russian soldiers aiming and shooting outside.  A few minutes later, with several gunshots and grenade explosions, Sergeant Keller emerged from the house.  He gathered his snipers.

    "There are only about twenty Russian soldiers in this building," he pointed to the front and said: "It seems that the Russians are hiding in large buildings in the city center. The commandos are now using this building as a hideout."

    They walked into the building and climbed to the second floor.  Heisenberg found a window here and was ready to shoot at any building.  The other snipers in Heisenberg's squad followed suit.

    Heisenberg carefully leaned out part of his body again and used the crosshairs of the scope to observe the buildings in the distance, and soon found the target he was looking for.  An enemy sniper was targeting the building where Heisenberg was located.  He had a smaller scope mounted on his rifle, and as Heisenberg took aim at him, the Russian sniper fired.

    Heisenberg imagined that one of his comrades was killed by the opponent.  He could not allow the other party to continue shooting.  So he gently pulled the trigger.  The bullet passed through the other man's left cheek and he fell down.

    Throughout the day, this process was repeated again and again.  Heisenberg and several other snipers fired at any enemy who appeared in the building's windows, while the commandos stormed into the building and cleared out the resisters.  Heisenberg took out bullets from the magazine bags of dead German soldiers several times. He was worried that he would run out of bullets.

    Sergeant Keller noticed Heisenberg's excellent shooting skills: "Heisenberg, you are a great soldier. I have never seen a sniper with skills like yours. I am happy to serve with you."

    "Thank you, Sergeant!" Heisenberg never heard.I have received such praise.

    In the battle that day, Heisenberg narrowly escaped an unexpected incident.  A bullet fired by a Russian sniper almost hit him in the head. Heisenberg's helmet strap lifted up and slapped him hard on the cheek, leaving a dark purple whip on his face.  mark.  Heisenberg lay on the ground for a long time, until he was convinced that the Russian sniper thought he had been killed. Then he slowly crawled to another window and leaned forward to search for signs of the enemy.

    After a few frightening minutes, Heisenberg spotted the enemy sniper.  He was looking at the building he was in through the scope on his rifle, searching for the target.  Heisenberg shot him in the forehead.

    At dusk, a large number of Russian soldiers surrounded in the city center raised their hands and surrendered.

    They were disarmed and headed south escorted by hundreds of German infantry.
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