THE SQUAD MOCKED HER “UGLY” TATTOO

General Vance, the base commander, had stood up. He was a man of iron, known for his icy demeanor. But now, he looked like heโ€™d seen a ghost.

He marched over to our table, ignoring the officers scrambling to salute him. He stopped in front of Dana.

His eyes were locked on the brand. His hands were shaking.

“I thought Unit Zero was a myth,” the General whispered.

Dana just looked at him. “Myths don’t bleed, sir.”

The General turned to Kyle, his face purple with rage. “You were mocking her?”

“It… it was a joke, sir,” Kyle stammered.

“That ‘joke’ on her arm,” the General growled, “means she has killed more men with a spoon than you have met in your entire life.”

He turned back to Dana, dropped to one knee, and asked the question that made the entire room freeze.

“Does the President know you’re still alive?”

Dana holds the Generalโ€™s gaze, unwavering. The silence in the mess hall is suffocating. Trays are frozen midair, jaws hang open. She doesnโ€™t blink. โ€œNo,โ€ she replies. โ€œAnd Iโ€™d prefer it stays that way.โ€

General Vance exhales like heโ€™s been punched in the gut. He lowers his voice. โ€œThen why are you here? Why now?โ€

Dana finally looks away, pulling down her sleeve. โ€œBecause somethingโ€™s coming. And youโ€™re not ready.โ€

The words hit harder than a siren. Vance straightens, barking an order to the nearest lieutenant. โ€œClear the mess hall. Now!โ€

No one questions him. Chairs scrape, boots stomp, and within seconds, the room is empty except for Dana, the General, and a few stunned officers.

Kyle lingers at the door, pale as chalk. Vance jerks his head toward him. โ€œYou. Stay.โ€

Dana folds her arms, scanning the empty hall like sheโ€™s back in a warzone. โ€œWe donโ€™t have time for games, General.โ€

Vance gestures to a table. โ€œThen letโ€™s talk.โ€

Dana doesnโ€™t sit. She remains standing, poised, every inch the soldier she once was. โ€œUnit Zero was never decommissioned,โ€ she says flatly. โ€œThey told the public we were killed in an ambush. Burned the records. But they kept the program running โ€” underground.โ€

Vanceโ€™s lips thin. โ€œWe suspected. But there was no proof.โ€

โ€œI am the proof,โ€ Dana snaps. โ€œAnd I wasnโ€™t the only one who made it out.โ€

A chill creeps down Kyleโ€™s spine. โ€œWaitโ€ฆ you mean there are more of you?โ€

Dana turns to him. โ€œThere were twelve of us. Iโ€™m the only one who walked away.โ€

She pauses. Her eyes darken. โ€œUntil now.โ€

Vance stiffens. โ€œWho?โ€

โ€œI donโ€™t know yet,โ€ she says. โ€œBut two weeks ago, I intercepted a code embedded in a radio transmission. It used the old cipher โ€” one only Unit Zero knew. I cracked it.โ€

โ€œAnd?โ€

Dana reaches into her pocket and tosses a crumpled note onto the table. Scrawled coordinates. A time. Tonight.

Vance studies it, then meets her gaze. โ€œYou think itโ€™s a trap?โ€

She nods. โ€œBut if itโ€™s not, then someoneโ€™s trying to finish what they started. Someone who knows what I am โ€” what we were trained to do.โ€

Kyle gulps audibly. โ€œTrained to do what?โ€

Danaโ€™s voice is ice. โ€œThings your nightmares wouldnโ€™t dare imagine.โ€

Vance straightens. โ€œYouโ€™re not going in alone.โ€

โ€œI am alone,โ€ Dana replies. โ€œThatโ€™s the point.โ€

He shakes his head. โ€œIโ€™m not letting you walk into an ambush.โ€

Dana steps closer, her voice low and fierce. โ€œWith all due respect, General, I survived a black site in Siberia. I took out a cartel leader with a toothbrush. I can handle this.โ€

Kyle whispers, โ€œA toothbrush?โ€

Dana doesnโ€™t smile. โ€œCeramic handle. Sharpened. Slipped it through customs inside a protein bar.โ€

Even Vance looks impressed.

A beat passes. Then Dana sighs. โ€œI need your help. Just this once.โ€

โ€œWhat do you need?โ€ Vance asks.

โ€œA drone. Unmarked. No transponder. I need it in the air above those coordinates by 2300 hours. Infrared sweep. And access to the armory. Quietly.โ€

Vance hesitates for half a second, then nods. โ€œDone.โ€

Dana turns to leave, then pauses. โ€œAnd General?โ€

He looks up.

โ€œIf I donโ€™t come back, burn everything.โ€

Then sheโ€™s gone.

Outside, the air is thick with heat and tension. The sun dips below the horizon, casting the base in shadows. Dana moves like a ghost through the compound. Her boots make no sound. Her eyes scan every corner, every rooftop. Sheโ€™s back in mission mode.

At the armory, sheโ€™s greeted by a soldier who pretends not to recognize her. No salute. No questions. He simply slides a duffel bag across the counter.

Inside: suppressed pistol, ceramic blade, recon goggles, and a small vial of something neon green. Dana pockets everything without flinching.

By 2245, sheโ€™s a mile from the coordinates. The landscape is barren โ€” an abandoned industrial park with crumbling concrete and rusted metal skeletons. The kind of place people forget.

Her earpiece crackles. โ€œDrone is live. No heat signatures. Yet.โ€

โ€œCopy,โ€ Dana murmurs.

She moves through the shadows, body low, breath slow. Every step is deliberate. Every sound matters.

Then โ€” a click.

Too late.

The net drops from above, triggered by a hidden tripwire. She slams to the ground, but doesnโ€™t panic. She rolls, flicks open her blade, and slices through the synthetic cords before they tighten.

Gunfire erupts.

She flips behind a pillar as bullets chip away the stone.

โ€œContact confirmed,โ€ Vanceโ€™s voice crackles. โ€œThree shooters. North sector.โ€

Dana doesnโ€™t respond. Sheโ€™s already moving.

She hurls a flashbang and sprints through the smoke. Her blade catches the first man in the throat before he can scream. The second raises his rifle โ€” too slow. She twists it from his hands and fires point-blank.

The third runs.

โ€œDrone โ€” track runner. Tag and follow,โ€ she says, panting.

โ€œLocked,โ€ the operator replies.

She retrieves the rifle and races into the warehouse. Her goggles flick to thermal. Nothing. She sweeps right. Then left.

Thenโ€”

A heartbeat.

Too close.

She spins just as a figure lunges from the shadows. They crash to the ground, grappling. Heโ€™s strong. Trained. But Danaโ€™s stronger. She jams her knee into his ribs and slams his head against the concrete.

He slumps.

She yanks his hood back โ€” and freezes.

Itโ€™s Alex.

Her old partner.

Heโ€™s older, leaner, but unmistakable. His face is bruised, bloodied, but alive.

โ€œAlex,โ€ she breathes.

He coughs, barely conscious. โ€œThey saidโ€ฆ you were deadโ€ฆโ€

โ€œNot yet,โ€ she mutters, pulling him upright.

โ€œTrap,โ€ he wheezes. โ€œBaitโ€ฆ for you.โ€

โ€œI figured,โ€ she says grimly.

Then โ€” static in her earpiece.

โ€œDana, weโ€™ve got movement. Lots of it. Tenโ€”no, twelve signatures closing on your position.โ€

She curses under her breath. โ€œExtraction now.โ€

Vance replies, โ€œAlready en route. Three minutes.โ€

โ€œWe donโ€™t have three minutes.โ€

She drags Alex to cover, rips open the vial of green liquid, and injects it into his arm.

โ€œWhatโ€ฆ is that?โ€ he groans.

โ€œAdrenaline blend. Itโ€™ll keep you alive long enough to run.โ€

โ€œCanโ€™tโ€ฆ walk.โ€

Dana grabs the discarded rifle and braces herself against the wall. Footsteps echo. Shadows shift. She takes aim.

The firefight is brutal.

She moves like liquid shadow, every bullet a whisper of death. Two go down. Then three. But they keep coming. One grazes her arm. Blood slicks her sleeve.

Alex stirs. โ€œBehind you!โ€

She spins, drops the attacker with a double tap.

โ€œWhereโ€™s that evac?โ€ she barks.

โ€œThirty seconds,โ€ Vance replies.

โ€œMake it ten.โ€

The roof explodes inward. A blackhawk drops low, its rotors screaming. A ladder dangles.

Dana hauls Alex over her shoulder and sprints. Bullets rip through the air. She jumps, grabs the rope, and theyโ€™re airborne.

Kyleโ€™s voice crackles through her comms. โ€œYou okay?โ€

She exhales shakily. โ€œNo.โ€

Vanceโ€™s voice cuts in. โ€œWhat the hell was that?โ€

Dana stares at the floor of the chopper. โ€œThey werenโ€™t mercs. They were trained like us. Someoneโ€™s building a new Unit Zero.โ€

Silence.

Then Vance says, โ€œWeโ€™ll find them. Together.โ€

Dana looks at Alex, barely breathing, but alive.

She finally nods. โ€œThen letโ€™s finish what they started.โ€

The chopper veers into the night, blades cutting through darkness like knives.

And this time โ€” she isnโ€™t alone.