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Now reading: Chapter 89 Story 89 The Forgotten Battalion from Horrific Shorts: Zombie Edition, a Action novel by Sir Faraz.

The battlefield was a desolate wasteland, scorched by the relentless onslaught of war. Once fertile fields were now charred and barren, littered with the remnants of shattered lives. A cold wind swept across the land, carrying the stench of death and the distant echoes of gunfire. The sky, once blue and serene, was now an ominous shade of gray, heavy with the weight of countless unburied souls.

Lieutenant Jack Thompson stood at the edge of a crater, his rifle slung over his shoulder, and his eyes scanning the horizon for any sign of movent. The war had dragged on for years, with no end in sight. What had begun as a fight for freedom had devolved into a nightmare of endless bloodshed and despair.

Thompson's battalion, once a proud unit of a hundred strong, had been reduced to a handful of weary, battle-hardened soldiers.

"Lieutenant," a voice called from behind him. Thompson turned to see Sergeant Miller, his second-in-command, approaching with a grim expression. "We've got movent on the west flank. Could be the enemy trying to flank us."

Thompson nodded, his face set in a determined grimace. "Take Johnson and Parker. Sweep the area. If you find anything, report back imdiately."

Miller gave a sharp salute before turning on his heel to gather the n. Thompson watched him go, a sense of foreboding settling over him like a shroud. Sothing about this day felt different—worse, sohow. The silence between the sporadic bursts of gunfire was unnerving, as if the world itself was holding its breath, waiting for sothing terrible to happen.

The Lieutenant's thoughts were interrupted by the sound of static crackling over the radio. He quickly pulled it from his belt, adjusting the frequency until a voice broke through the noise.

"...Copy, Thompson. This is HQ. We've lost contact with the 3rd Battalion. Last known position was in the Black Forest, five klicks west of your location. We need you to recon the area and report back. Over."

Thompson's heart sank. The Black Forest was a place whispered about among the troops—a dense, ancient woodland that seed to swallow entire units without a trace. n who ventured in often didn't return, and those who did spoke of strange occurrences, as if the forest itself were alive and malevolent.

"Roger that, HQ," Thompson replied, though every instinct scread at him to refuse the order. He glanced over at the remnants of his battalion—tired, hungry, and barely holding on. But orders were orders, and there was no room for hesitation.

"Sergeant!" he called out as Miller and the others returned from their sweep. "We've got new orders. We're heading to the Black Forest. Gear up and be ready to move out in five."

Miller's face tightened, but he simply nodded. The n prepared in silence, their movents thodical and resigned. They had all heard the stories, but they were soldiers—they had no choice but to obey.

The march to the Black Forest was uneventful, but the tension among the n was palpable. The closer they got, the darker the sky beca, as if the forest was drawing all light and warmth into its depths. By the ti they reached the tree line, the sun had nearly disappeared, leaving only a sickly, fading light to guide them.

"Keep your wits about you," Thompson ordered as they entered the forest. The trees lood overhead, their gnarled branches twisting like the fingers of a giant, skeletal hand. The air grew colder with each step, and the silence was oppressive, broken only by the crunch of boots on dead leaves and the occasional rustle of unseen creatures.

They advanced deeper into the forest, their nerves fraying with every passing mont. Thompson's mind raced with thoughts of the 3rd Battalion. Where had they gone? What had happened to them? The further they went, the more he felt as if they were being watched, stalked by sothing unseen, sothing inhuman.

Suddenly, a blood-curdling scream pierced the silence, echoing through the trees. The n froze, their weapons raised, eyes darting in every direction. The scream was cut off abruptly, leaving only the sound of their labored breathing.

"Form up!" Thompson commanded, but his voice was shaky, betraying his fear. The n clustered together, backs to each other, rifles trained outward. But there was nothing—no movent, no sound—just the overwhelming sense of dread.

"Lieutenant..." Miller's voice was barely a whisper, but it was enough to make Thompson turn. What he saw sent a chill down his spine. Behind them, where there had once been a path, the forest had closed in, the trees pressing together like a wall, cutting off their retreat.

Before Thompson could react, the shadows between the trees began to shift and move, coalescing into dark, twisted figures. The air grew thick with the stench of decay, and an otherworldly whispering filled their ears, a chorus of voices speaking in a language none of them understood.

The figures stepped forward, revealing themselves to be the missing soldiers of the 3rd Battalion—or what was left of them. Their eyes were hollow, their faces gaunt, their bodies twisted and malford, as if the forest had claid them and reshaped them into sothing monstrous.

"Fall back!" Thompson yelled, but it was too late. The forest had them trapped, and the shadows surged forward, enveloping the n in darkness. Gunfire erupted, but the bullets seed to have no effect, passing through the figures as if they were made of smoke.

One by one, the n fell, their screams swallowed by the forest. Thompson fought desperately, firing into the darkness, but he knew it was futile. The shadows closed in around him, and he felt the cold, clammy touch of the forest's tendrils wrapping around his limbs, pulling him down into the earth.

As the darkness consud him, Thompson's last thought was of the 3rd Battalion—forgotten by the world, lost to the forest, just as he and his n would be. The war outside would rage on, but in the Black Forest, ti stood still, and the fallen would remain, trapped in an eternal nightmare, forever part of the land they had once fought to defend.

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