He opened the letter, read the first line, and his knees hit the ground when he realized who I really was because the letter bears the seal of the Joint Special Operations Command, and the first line reads: โEffective immediately, Colonel Gregory Vance is relieved of duty under Article 94โMutiny and Sedition.โ
Gasps ripple through the cadet formation like a wave, and a few step back instinctively. Vance stares at the paper, blinking like a man waking up from a nightmare, his lips trembling.
I step forward, my voice low but sharp. โIโve been watching you, Vance. For two years. Ever since that convoy in Kandahar went dark under your watch. You thought no one knew. You thought you buried it under enough classified bullshit to be safe.โ
โYouโYou canโtโโ Vance stutters, his fingers crumpling the letter.
The Secretary of Defense signals his team. Two MPs move forward, cuffing Vance with practiced efficiency. โYouโre done, Greg,โ the Secretary says coldly. โWe have the logs. The wire transfers. The dead kids in Sector 9 you left behind to cover your escape.โ
Vance screams as they haul him into one of the SUVs, his voice cracking. โSheโs lying! Sheโs not even cleared for Tier One intel! Sheโs justโjust aโโ
โCommander Alexis Rourke,โ I interrupt, loud enough for everyone to hear. โDirector of Shadow Directive Six.โ
Dead silence.
I turn to face the cadets. Some have their mouths open. Others stand perfectly still, afraid to blink. These are the best and brightest, and theyโve just had the rug yanked out from under them.
โI wasnโt undercover to spy on you,โ I say, scanning their stunned faces. โI was here to see how deep the rot went.โ
The Secretary nods. โAnd thanks to your Commander, weโve confirmed what we feared. Thereโs a breach in the upper echelons of your command structure. Vance wasnโt alone.โ
A ripple of unease spreads. Cadets shift, glancing at each other. I see itโdoubt, suspicion, confusion. Theyโre young, but theyโre not fools. They know something bigger is happening.
I walk over to the dirt where my Captain bars lie forgotten and drop them into a bin. Then I unseal a small black pouch from my belt and retrieve a different insigniaโan obsidian-colored pin with a ghosted six-point star.
Some gasp. That pin isnโt supposed to exist.
โI didnโt want it to go down like this,โ I say, clipping it to my chest. โBut this base is compromised. Effective immediately, Fort Talon is under provisional command. You report to me now. Or you leave.โ
A heavy pause. No one moves.
Then Cadet First Sergeant Emma Dillard, a spitfire with a buzz cut and a reputation for having ice in her veins, steps forward. โMaโam. Permission to speak freely.โ
โGranted.โ
She points to the SUVs. โHow deep does this go?โ
โDeeper than you can imagine,โ I reply. โAnd it starts now. Your training isnโt overโitโs beginning.โ
The Secretary steps forward. โWeโre pulling ten of youโtop of your class. Youโll enter an advanced program so classified it doesnโt have a name. Those who remain will aid in the clean-up. Youโll be given a chance to prove yourselves. But understand thisโyour next mistakes wonโt be corrected with pushups. Theyโll cost lives.โ
Ten names flash onto the baseโs digital billboard. Murmurs stir through the ranks as they realize the selection is pre-loaded. Weโve known who we needed for months.
โYou have five minutes to grab your gear,โ I say. โThe rest of youโstand down. Investigators will arrive by nightfall. Anyone not ready to be debriefed can submit a resignation and walk.โ
A single cadet tries to slink away. Two MPs intercept him.
Emma Dillard doesnโt even blink. โGuess he picked wrong.โ
Sheโs one of the ten. She knows it. And sheโs already rolling up her sleeves.
The chopper blades thrum overhead as we lift off. Inside the Osprey, the selected cadets sit strapped in, their eyes wild with adrenaline and fear. I donโt sugarcoat anything.
โYour old world is gone,โ I tell them. โThereโs no chain of command out there. No backup. Only targets and operators. You screw up, you donโt go to jail. You vanish.โ
One cadet, Harris, leans forward. โWhy us? Why now?โ
I meet his eyes. โBecause youโve already been tested. You just didnโt know it. Every drill, every course, every psychological evalโwe were watching. Vance thought he was testing your loyalty to him. But he was actually testing your loyalty to something higher. The truth.โ
The Secretary passes each cadet a dossier. โYour first op starts tonight. A biotech facility in Nevada is leaking assets. We believe someone inside is selling neural interface tech to an off-books PMC. We need eyes on the ground before they make a move.โ
Emma frowns. โThatโs what weโre doing? Spying?โ
โNo,โ I say, flipping my own dossier shut. โWeโre burning the rot out. From the inside. With fire.โ
The Nevada facility is cold and sleekโwhite walls, biometric locks, fake smiles. A company called NeuroLance runs it, but weโve already linked their offshore accounts to Vanceโs network. What we donโt know is who on the inside flipped.
We go in as a federal inspection team. No weapons, no armorโjust suits and forged clearance.
โKeep your comms open,โ I whisper to Emma as we step into the main lab. โWatch the eyes. Not the hands. Traitors always give themselves away when they think youโre not a threat.โ
A man in a gray suit greets usโDr. Louis Mendel, Chief R&D Officer. Nervous hands. Too polite. I know that look. Heโs scared, but not of us. Heโs scared of whoeverโs really pulling the strings.
โI trust everything is up to code?โ he asks, gesturing toward a bank of servers behind reinforced glass.
โLetโs find out,โ I reply, and nod to Harris, whoโs already cracked into their local network via a disguised tablet.
Within minutes, his face goes pale. โMaโam. Thereโs a second subnet. Hidden.โ
Dr. Mendel stiffens.
โLocked behind a deadmanโs protocol,โ Harris whispers. โOnly activates if someone tries to delete it.โ
I turn to Mendel. โDonโt make this harder than it has to be. You didnโt build that failsafe. Someone else did. Whoโs your handler?โ
He breaks. Collapses into the chair. โThey said theyโd kill my daughter if I didnโtโโ
โWhere is she?โ
โZurich. Boarding school.โ
I nod. โEmma, send the extraction team. Priority Alpha.โ
Sheโs already on it.
Dr. Mendel looks up, tears in his eyes. โYou donโt understand. Itโs not just data. Theyโre building a neural warfare prototypeโpredictive combat AI. With live test subjects. American soldiers.โ
My heart seizes. โWhere?โ
He types furiously. The screen reveals a remote site in Arizonaโan unmarked dome in the desert.
I key my comms. โWe have a red site. Coordinates incoming. Full strike team authorization.โ
โCommander,โ Harris says, looking shaken. โWeโre not ready for live ops. Weโve had eight hours of prep.โ
I look at him, hard. โYou want to wait until those test subjects die screaming in their helmets? Or until this โAIโ is dropped into a warzone and starts choosing who lives based on kill ratios?โ
He swallows and nods.
The desert bleeds heat even at night. We approach low, in blackout mode, two blackhawks skimming just above radar. I lead the breach teamโEmma on my left, Harris and two others behind us. The facility is disguised as a weather station, but infrared tells a different story.
Motion. Dozens of heat signatures. Some human. Some not.
We breach at 03:17.
The first guard doesnโt even get to shout. Emma takes him out with a silenced shot. We move fastโsweeping room to room. Then we find them.
Cells.
Inside: soldiers strapped to neural harnesses, eyes wide with terror, twitching under strobe lights and machine pulses. Electrodes jammed into skulls.
Harris gags. โThey were testing it live.โ
The intercom crackles. A voice fills the air.
โNice of you to drop by, Commander Rourke.โ
I freeze. I know that voice.
General Austin Merrick. Retired. Or so we thought.
โYou really think cutting off Vanceโs head meant the snake died?โ he says, laughing. โYouโve got no idea what this is. Youโre playing checkers on a chessboard, girl.โ
I signal the team to move. โIโve got your voiceprint, Merrick. Thatโs all I need.โ
He chuckles. โNo, Alexis. You need a way out.โ
The lights go red. Then the AI activates.
The soldiers in the cells jerk violentlyโthen their eyes go still. Too still.
They stand.
The AI is onlineโand itโs taken control of their motor systems.
โTheyโre puppets,โ Emma breathes.
Not for long. They burst from the cells.
I donโt hesitate. โStun rounds only! Theyโre victims, not enemies!โ
The fight is chaosโstrobe lights, screams, taser crackles. I take a hit to the ribs but keep moving. One by one, we down them. Harris hacks the mainframe while Emma covers his six.
Then, silence.
The AI dies with a final flicker.
I find Merrick in the control roomโgun drawn, smirking.
โI built this to save us,โ he says. โTo win wars before they even start.โ
โNo,โ I whisper, stepping closer. โYou built it to play God.โ
I shoot him in the shoulder. He crumples.
โGet him up,โ I tell the others. โHeโs going to talk.โ
Dawn breaks over the desert.
Dozens of soldiers are alive. Shaken, but free. The AI servers are torched. Merrick is en route to a black site where his name doesnโt matter.
Back at HQ, the Secretary of Defense meets me with a rare smile.
โYou did it.โ
โNo,โ I say, watching Emma walk by with her head high, blood on her sleeves and steel in her spine. โWe did.โ
He nods. โShadow Directive Six is now official. Permanent. Youโll lead.โ
I nod once. โWeโll be ready. The next time someone tries to hijack our future… weโll already be there.โ
And as the sun rises over the scorched sands, I feel something I havenโt felt in yearsโhope.




