A Guard Post Horror Story The Radio Call You Should Never Respond To

Anyone who has ever done a dawn shift knows this.
Around two‑thirty, time stops moving strangely.
You check your wristwatch—2:31.
Check again—2:32.
The junior standing next to you nods off and jerks awake over and over.
It was the same that day, they said.
It was a guard post near the mountain.
Behind them was a barbed‑wire fence, in front an unpaved road, and to the right an old ammunition depot no one used anymore.
There were two soldiers on duty.
One senior.
One junior.
At first, nothing happened.
The wind was cold, and the heater inside the post was off.
The junior rubbed his hands and said,
“Corporal, is it always this quiet here?”
The senior answered half‑heartedly,
“Don’t talk. It makes time go slower.”
Then the radio crackled.
Chzzzt.
Both of them looked at it.
They thought the situation room was calling.
“Post 3, Post 3.”
The senior picked up the radio.
“Post 3, no issues.”
There was a brief silence.
Then more static.
Chzzzt.
And a voice said,
“Open the door.”
The junior looked at the senior.
The guard post door was already closed.
No one was outside.
The senior didn’t answer.
It could’ve been a prank.
Or another post on the wrong channel.
But the voice sounded too close, they said.
Not like it came through