On the fourth day of the attack on Li Family Village, perhaps due to the news that Tang Country's Navy had stealthily attacked various nations' ports with great success, the Dahua Empire's assault intensified.
The soldiers charged like a tidal wave, seemingly indifferent to losses. As they shouted their slogans and pressed forward, the Dahua artillery's bombardment continued without cessation.
Along with the rain, hundreds of shells fell, densely carpeting Tang Army's positions, subjecting them to a taste of what fire suppression truly meant.
The repeatedly reinforced trenches, under the ravages of shellfire, became battered beyond recognition. With every explosion, the earth trembled, and the water filling the foxholes seemed never to regain stillness.
A soldier, carrying an ammunition box nailed together from planks of wood, hurried through the narrow trenches to an inconspicuous machine gun position near the end and set down the delivered ammunition box.