Red Sands: The Kandahar Incident is a military horror thriller that starts with a lost Ranger team and descends into a cavern where physics bends, light fails, and something ancient judges trespassers. Sergeant Matt Reed leads Odin-6 into a shunned valley outside Kandahar to recover Echo-2. Gear is found laid out like offerings, echoes do not return, and the cave’s polished black walls drink light. Inside are carvings of fallen giants, footprints three feet long, and twelve Rangers broken without bullet wounds, arranged in a spiral toward a dark center. Then the hum begins, electronics die, and embers ignite where eyes should be.
This book delivers hard military detail with cosmic dread. You will feel rotor wash, kit checks, radio brevity, and the tactical logic of a four-man team, then watch those rules fail under an older order. The tension is relentless: a magnetized blackout, an interpreter’s warning about red-headed demons, a kinetic strike from a thrown boulder that hits like artillery, and a contact whose hide swallows rifle fire.
What you get
Special Operations realism: insertion, comms, med protocols, decision under fire
Folk memory meets forbidden archaeology: wall reliefs that predate empire and name the giants as kings
Set pieces that hit: gear arranged at the mouth like tribute, a silent shot with no echo, the first sighting in shrinking light
Read if you like
Military thrillers with speculative menace
Cosmic horror grounded in procedure and cause-and-effect
Stories that test brotherhood when doctrine fails
Commercial clarity
Keywords: military thriller, special forces, Afghanistan, cave horror, cosmic horror, ancient giants, lost Ranger team, survival horror
Clean structure for KDP: hook, mission, discovery, escalation, pursuit
No filler, cinematic pacing, cliffhanger chapter turns
Content guidance
Graphic combat injury, death, panic, claustrophobia, depictions of war. Fictionalized units and operations.
Back-cover promise
A rescue op becomes a judgment. Radios die, light dims, and the mountain stands up. If you want rotor-speed pacing with deep dread, step into the cave and listen. The hum is getting louder.









