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What the Japanese hadn’t planned on were the flamethrowers. One of the tanks pulled back slightly, pivoted on its tracks, and then advanced again until its main gun was practically touching the bunker. A stream of orange-and-red flame suddenly shot from where the machine gun was normally located.

“I’ll be damned. They’re Satans!” Philly shouted, using the nickname for tanks that had been rigged with flamethrowers to release hellfire against the enemy. These tanks had first made their appearance on Guam and Saipan. They were both hated and feared by the Japanese.

The Satans had been aptly named. The tank had been aiming for the bunker’s horizontal slit, from which the Japanese defenders were firing. Instantly the front of the bunker was covered in a fireball.

Deke shuddered at the sight of the flames. He could only imagine what it must be like to face a flamethrower. In fact, he didn’t want to imagine too hard. Deke had given himself over to violence — there wasn’t any other choice as a soldier if you wanted to survive — but some part of him remained amazed at the sheer cruelty of this weapon of war.

The scorching flame seemed so much more inhumane than a simple bullet. The fire would reach deep into the bunker, licking into every corner. The flames were sticky, in a sense, because they were fueled by a jellied gasoline that clung to whatever it touched. Those enemy troops who weren’t burned to death often suffocated as the hungry fire sucked the oxygen from the confined space inside the bunker.

All in all, the flamethrower was a horrible weapon but was highly effective when there was no other hope of rooting out the enemy.

The tank gave one last burst with its flamethrower. No sooner had the flames subsided than a couple of soldiers ran forward and lobbed grenades through the smoking, blackened gap. If anyone had managed to survive the inferno, the grenades would surely finish them off.

Nearby, Philly made a gagging noise. “Ugh, that smell! Makes me sick to my stomach.”

Philly was more than right. The stink of the burning fuel from the flamethrowers mingled with the smell of burned flesh. “I won’t mind getting out of this place and finding some fresh air,” Deke agreed.

But they weren’t done yet with Ipil. One by one, the tanks knocked out the bunkers and the enemy soldiers inside them, with teams of GIs following up with grenades. By the time that nightfall approached, the bunkers as well as the area surrounding the old US military base known as Camp Downes had been secured.

The next prize would be Ormoc itself, and they all knew that the Japanese would not give up the town easily.

CHAPTER SEVENTEEN

By nightfall, Camp Downes and the surrounding area were back in American control, at least for the time being. They all knew from experience that darkness would likely bring Japanese infiltrators, if not a full counterattack.

Consequently, the outcome of the fight might depend on the next few hours. The US line was spread thin, extending tenuously from the beachhead. Military doctrine stated that a beachhead should extend at least a quarter of a mile from the landing zone itself, creating a defensive bubble that would reduce harassing fire or mortar attacks by the enemy.

It wasn’t always possible to follow military doctrine. Sometimes the reality was that you had to hang on by your fingernails. The division barely had enough men to hold the beachhead. Fortunately for US troops, the Japanese had not tried to force the soldiers back into the sea but had fallen back to defend Ormoc and its airfield.

The situation meant that there would be no relief for Merrick’s company or for Patrol Easy. Whatever came their way at Camp Downes, they would have no choice but to face it and try to hang on.

Being little more than a collection of old wooden barracks and outbuildings, Camp Downes did not provide much in the way of a defensive position. It hadn’t been intended as a fortress. If it hadn’t been for the war, the waterfront location of the camp would have been quite pleasant, situated to capture both the view and the cooling breeze off the water. The outpost had been intended as a presence during the days of the Filipino insurrection more than thirty years before, a jumping-off point for patrols into the nearby countryside.

The Japanese had done little to expand the former American outpost, but had focused their attention on building the concrete bunkers and other defenses. Those bunkers were now blackened and blasted ruins, still smoldering from flamethrower attacks by the Satan tanks. Within the smoking bunkers were the remains of the Japanese defenders.

No one was eager to occupy the bunkers under the circumstances, so the soldiers dug foxholes in the open ground around Camp Downes.

“If I’d known that I’d be digging so much, I would have stayed on the farm,” Deke said, bent over his entrenching tool.

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Тара Мосс — топ-модель и один из лучших современных авторов детективных романов. Ее книги возглавляют списки бестселлеров в США, Канаде, Австралии, Новой Зеландии, Японии и Бразилии. Чтобы уверенно себя чувствовать в криминальном жанре, она прошла стажировку в Академии ФБР, полицейском управлении Лос-Анджелеса, была участницей многочисленных конференций по криминалистике и психоанализу.Благодаря своему обаянию и проницательному уму известная фотомодель Макейди смогла раскрыть серию преступлений и избежать собственной смерти. Однако ей предстоит еще одна встреча с жестоким убийцей — в зале суда. Станет ли эта встреча последней? Ведь девушка даже не подозревает, что чистосердечное признание обвиняемого лишь продуманный шаг на пути к свободе и осуществлению его преступных планов…

Александр Иванович Алтунин , Андрей Истомин , Дмитрий Давыдов , Дмитрий Иванович Живодворов , Никки Ром , Тара Мосс

Фантастика / Карьера, кадры / Детективы / Фантастика: прочее / Криминальные детективы / Маньяки / Триллеры / Современная проза / Триллер