A young, inexperienced soldier fed a snake, even though his comrades had warned him not to: a few days later, something terrible happened to him
The soldiers had long grown used to serving in the middle of an empty, endless field where not a single soul could be found for miles around. Only the wind, a few birds, and the occasional wandering animal broke the silence.
Service was calm and uneventful — but it was exactly that monotony that wore them down. The men were bored, homesick, longing for their families and any trace of a human face. No contact, no news, no entertainment — only tents and an eternal wait that seemed to hum in their ears.
Every Sunday, they received water, supplies, and letters from home, but the week between those days felt unbearably long.
Everyone tried to find something to occupy themselves with: some polished their boots until they shone, others read the same book over and over, and some just sat by the campfire in silence, staring into nothing.
One early morning, one of the soldiers — a young, completely inexperienced recruit who had just arrived — noticed something strange near his tent. On the dry ground, about a meter from his boots, lay a huge black snake, coiled tightly.
It didn’t hiss or strike — it simply watched him. The young man froze, but instead of fear, he felt an odd sense of pity. The snake’s gaze didn’t seem evil, but hungry and tired.
He took a piece of bread from his pocket — leftovers from dinner — and carefully reached out his hand. The snake remained still for a moment, then slowly slithered forward, took the bread, and disappeared.
When his comrades found out, they just shook their heads.
— “Are you crazy?” — said the sergeant. — “It’s a snake. It’s dangerous. You don’t feed them.”
But the young man just smiled.
— “Come on, she was hungry. I just wanted to help.”
That was the end of it — and after a few days, he’d already forgotten the strange morning. But a few days later, something terrible happened Continue in the first comment
In the middle of the night, when the camp was silent, a faint rustling came from inside his tent. At first, the young soldier thought it was the wind. But when the sound grew closer, he opened his eyes — and froze in terror.
Around him, as if crawling out of the shadows, were dozens of snakes. All of them — as black as the first one. They hissed, moving in perfect unison, and in their cold eyes there was something that looked like recognition.
He slowly sat up, trying not to make any sudden movements, but the snakes had already surrounded him. He realized they had come for food and began frantically searching — a piece of bread, a crumb, anything.
But there was nothing left from dinner. And in that instant, when the first snake lifted its head and its tongue flickered through the air, the young man understood what was about to happen.
The hissing grew louder. All the snakes moved at once — and began to attack, biting him.
In the morning, when his comrades noticed that the young soldier hadn’t come to the lineup, they went to check his tent. His body lay by the entrance, eyes wide open, skin covered with dozens of small, almost neat bite marks.
There were no snakes nearby — only winding trails in the dust leading toward the forest.
From that day on, no one ever dared to feed wild animals again.