Chapter 147: Thirty Days of Hell (54)
When this man walked over, he first saw the headless corpse lying on the ground and still spurting blood, and suddenly stopped, he was full of fear and a little overwhelmed for a while. Sabah smiled disdainfully when he saw this man's appearance, and gestured to his subordinates who came with him, and then the bag in the villager's hand was snatched and carried directly in front of Sabah, and opened the bag to show Sabah.
Sabah looked at the two bags separately, smiled and nodded, looking satisfied with the contents of the two bags. I looked at Bediev beside me and said, "What is there to eat?" What is it? ”
Bediev walked over to the bag, looked at it, turned to me, and said, "One is a corn tortilla, and the other looks like a lamb jerky." ”
Sabah overheard my conversation with Bediev, and after one look at us, he said a few words to his men and waved his hand. His men immediately put away the two bags, then walked up to me and threw them at our feet as Sabah looked at me and spoke.
Bediev began: "He said that these two bags of food were for us. These two bags should be enough for us to eat for three or four days, and if we save a little, a week will be fine. ”
I looked at Saeed and motioned for him to put the bag away, then I looked at Sabah and said, "And water." We need to resupply water. ”
Sabah nodded, and pointed to the villager who had brought the food. Bediev immediately said: "He said that this man has a well in his house. It is possible to go there. “
I nodded and looked at Said, "Someone go and collect everyone's kettles and fill them all with water." "As I spoke, Qasim walked up to Sabah, and he looked at Sabah and said a few words.
I looked at Bediev, and Bediev immediately said: "He said that we should all hurry up and leave?" It's not safe here. “
Sabah didn't say anything special about Qasim's words, but Kadibi, who was holding a knife on the side, seemed to react more violently. He pointed to the headless corpse on the ground and said a few words, as if he had won some great victory.
He said not to be afraid. This victory is just the beginning. Bediev said.
Kasim glanced at Kadibi with a blank face, it felt like he was looking at a retarded person, there was no mockery or any other meaning, in short, it was a kind of ignorance. He glanced at him, and before Kadibi could finish his rhetoric, he continued to speak to Sabah.
Kassim's performance obviously made Kadibi very dissatisfied, and the fanatical guy suddenly walked towards Kasim with a knife and a look of rage. Just as we were about to stop something that shouldn't happen, Qasim had quickly pulled out a pistol and pointed it at the head of Kadibi, who was close at hand.
Kadibi stopped quickly, but there was no fear on his face, but on the contrary, he seemed to me to have a faint sense of excitement. Of course, Qasim's actions made Sabah's subordinates around him nervous, and everyone ended the relationship with their comrades, each raising their guns and pointing at each other.
Sabah raised his hand and shouted twice, but Qasim ignored it and continued to put his gun further on Kadibi's head and spoke. Bediev pointed a gun at Sabah's men and said, "He's asking what Sabah means." When was it the turn of such a mindless guy as Cardibi to talk to him? He said he was going to shoot him in the head right now to see what Sabah could do to him. “
Sabah looked at Qasim and said a word, then he slowly walked over to Kadibi's side, then took the knife from Kadibi's hand and reloaded it back to himself, and then he motioned for his men to lower their guns and not point them at us. After his men complied, Sabah reached out and pressed Qasim's hand as he spoke.
Qasim looked at Sabah and sneered that he did not relax, but asked a rhetorical question. "He was asking Sabah if he knew that the recent shelling almost killed him along with us," Bediev began. He asked if it was intentional? “
Sabah listened to Qasim's question and immediately shook his head while talking. "He denied it," Bediev said. He said it was completely impossible. He said he needed everyone to work together against the Americans, the British, and the Northern Alliance. He wouldn't push his friends over the side of the enemy. So he reassured Qasim. He said that everyone should leave now, and that when the men brought food, everyone had to retreat into the mountains after filling their kettles and water bags. ”
I looked at Qasim, who listened to Sabah's words and slowly relaxed his right arm and slowly removed the muzzle of the gun. However, I can see that Sabah's previous words are nonsense to Qasim, because in our words, the first half of Sabah's words is "false big empty". It was the last two sentences that really moved Kassim. Why did Qasim come here? All he wanted was to leave instead of keep fighting. And retreating into the mountains is undoubtedly the first and most important step to achieve his goal.
Seeing that Qasim was persuaded to come down, Sabah seemed to breathe a sigh of relief. He looked at Kadibi and said a few words, and Kadibi looked reluctant to bow his head to Kasim and said a few words, so that he could see that he was probably apologizing.
Soon, Ahmed, his companions, and Akmal were brought in by Sabah's men. Everyone quickly left the village with what they wanted after converging, and gathered together on the side of the road leading south of the village to the mountain to the southeast. On the way to the south, I found that Sabah's attack was not at all as easy as I felt in the east. The route of the Sabah can be clearly seen along this road, because there are many Sabah people on the route. I looked at the team, and excluding me and Qasim's men, there were still about two dozen of Sabah's men, including the wounded who were about to be taken with them, which means that more than half of the men had lost in attacking such a village.
And what about the other side? According to the estimates I have seen so far, the other party estimates that it has lost more than ten people, and most of them are people from the Northern Alliance. And what about the SAS of the Australians? I guess I lost one or two people. This is not just the statement provided by the villager, it can also be calculated in combination with the actual situation. The simplest thing is, if they have suffered a lot of losses, how can they not leave a corpse behind? This can only be explained by the fact that, firstly, they did not have any dead people, and secondly, they did not suffer much, and they could have left with extra hands to carry the bodies of their wounded or fallen comrades.
Have a great weekend everyone!
(End of chapter)