Major Davis, a new transfer with an ego the size of the hangar, loved to pick on her. “Careful with that, honey,” heโd sneer. “That belt costs more than your life.” Holly never responded. She just focused on the safety latches.
Yesterday, the heat was brutal. As Holly reached up to secure the feed chute, her sleeve slid down. Major Davis froze mid-laugh. He was staring at a small, geometric tattoo on the inside of her wrist.
He dropped his clipboard. His face turned ghost white. He knew that symbol. It wasn’t for mechanics. It was a classified marker for “Task Force 1,” a unit that didn’t officially exist.
He walked over to her, shaking. “Who are you?” he stammered. Holly finally looked up, her eyes ice cold. She didn’t look like a mechanic anymore. She leaned in close and whispered โIโm the reason your mission in Kandahar didnโt fail.โ
For a full beat, all he can do is blink. The sun, the rotors, the heat โ all of it fades under the weight of those words.
โYou were there,โ he breathes.
Holly pulls her sleeve down slowly, locks the feed chute, then finally stands up straight. Sheโs taller than she looks when she isnโt hunched over 50-pound ammo belts. Her eyes never waver.
โYou donโt talk about Task Force 1 unless you want men in suits to show up and erase your clearance. Or your pulse,โ she says evenly.
Davis stumbles backward, mind racing. โButโฆ that unit was shut down. Five years ago. Everyone said the only survivor wasโโ
Holly cuts him off with a look so sharp it could gut him. โDead? Thatโs what they wanted you to think.โ
She turns away, heading back toward the munitions shack, leaving him staring. Davis, the swaggering, arrogant pilot who once barked at her like she was a nobody, now watches her like sheโs carrying nuclear codes in her back pocket.
That afternoon, the usual rhythm of the base is off. Word spreads. Not through shouting or gossip, but through quiet changes. Pilots who used to chuckle when Holly passed now avert their eyes. Sergeant Monroe, the grizzled ammo chief, gives her a subtle nod. Heโs known all along โ the way he double-checks every manifest she signs, the way he never asked her about her past. Respect, earned not by noise but by silence.
Later, Davis finds her alone in the break tent, sipping a lukewarm bottle of water.
โI owe you an apology,โ he says, voice lower than usual.
Holly doesnโt look up. โFor which part? The โhoneyโ or the part where you assumed I was disposable?โ
He sits, but keeps distance. โBoth.โ
For a moment, thereโs only the distant rumble of an incoming Chinook. Then she says, โDo you even know what that symbol means? The tattoo?โ
He nods. โItโs a target designation code. You werenโt just support. You were a field marker. The kind they dropped entire ops around.โ
โThatโs part of it,โ she says. โBut itโs more than that. It means I had eyes on target before you ever launched. It means I gave the green light. I was the voice in the dark that made decisions no one else could take responsibility for.โ
Davis is silent.
Then, โThey said the survivor took out the Black Crescent safe house. That she went in alone, no air cover.โ
Hollyโs eyes darken, but she doesnโt deny it. โThey had kids in there. Hostages. Command didnโt want blood on the news. I made sure they all walked out.โ
โAnd the intel?โ he asks quietly.
โBuried in a wall behind a false panel. I retrieved it. And then I torched the place.โ
Davis leans forward, elbows on knees. โWhy come here? Why hide in plain sight?โ
Holly shrugs. โBecause I wanted out. No more fieldwork. No more secrets. Ammo is honest. It does what you load it to do.โ
โYou think the people who ran Task Force 1 are just going to let you fade out?โ
She gives a tired smile. โThey already tried. Twice. Both times, they failed.โ
Suddenly, a low hum rises above the base. Not chopper blades โ this is something else. Electronic. A buzzing on the comms frequency. Then the loudspeakers crackle.
โAll personnel, secure base. Repeat, secure base. Level Three protocol. Lockdown.โ
Davis bolts upright. Holly is already moving.
At the operations hub, chaos is brewing. Radar picked up an unauthorized drone above the perimeter. Not a cheap commercial one โ military grade. Cloaked.
Holly shoves past the techs and grabs a headset.
โRun the signature,โ she orders. โLook for nested beacon pings. If itโs who I think it is, it wonโt show on first scan.โ
The lieutenant manning the console blinks. โMaโam, who the hell are you?โ
โSheโs the reason youโre not dead yet,โ Davis snaps. โDo what she says.โ
The second scan pops. Holly curses under her breath. โItโs them.โ
โWho?โ the base commander demands.
Holly stares at the blinking red dot on the screen. โShadow Directive. Theyโre not part of the U.S. military anymore. If theyโre here, it means they want to clean up.โ
โClean up what?โ someone shouts.
โMe,โ she says.
Thereโs a moment of frozen silence, then Holly whirls around. โWe need to disable the drone. Itโs not just surveillance. They use those for precision kills. One shot. No debris. Nothing left.โ
โWhereโs it hovering?โ
โDirectly above the ammo bay,โ the tech says, paling.
A chill sweeps the room. Thatโs where Holly had been all morning.
โThey donโt want witnesses,โ she says. โThis whole base is collateral unless I stop it.โ
Before anyone can argue, sheโs already sprinting out the door.
Davis catches up to her near the barracks. โWhatโs the plan?โ
โIโm going to make them think Iโm already dead.โ
She races into the hangar, tearing open a side panel on one of the old decommissioned Black Hawks. Inside, wrapped in oil cloth and dust, is a tracking scrambler. Itโs old-school, off-grid, and exactly what she needs.
โI drop this on the roof of the ammo bay, spoof my bio signature to appear terminated. Theyโll confirm and abort.โ
โWonโt they double-check?โ Davis asks.
โThey will. Thatโs why youโre going to give them something else to chase.โ
He blinks. โExcuse me?โ
โYouโre going up in the Apache. Take a flight path that mimics my old evac pattern. Make it look like I bolted. Theyโll follow you.โ
Davis hesitates only a second. Then he nods. โJust like Kandahar?โ
โExactly like Kandahar,โ she says.
The next ten minutes move in silence and precision. Holly bolts to the roof, clips the scrambler to the vent shaft above the ammo bay, and triggers it. Instantly, a decaying heat signature pulses out like a dying star. The drone hovers, scans, then blinks twice โ and starts pulling back.
Davis, already in the air, punches coordinates into the nav system. The drone shifts direction, tailing him.
Inside the hangar, Holly drops behind a stack of crates and exhales for the first time in days.
The drone vanishes over the ridge.
An hour later, Davis lands.
Holly is waiting.
โThey bought it,โ he says.
โFor now.โ
He sits beside her on the edge of a loading ramp. โYou think theyโll try again?โ
โDefinitely. But next time, I wonโt be on defense.โ
Davis studies her face. โYou thinking of going after them?โ
Hollyโs mouth twists into something between a smile and a snarl. โTask Force 1 was buried. But I never signed off on that burial. And Shadow Directiveโฆ they forgot I know where they sleep.โ
He chuckles dryly. โRemind me never to get on your bad side.โ
โYou already did,โ she says, smirking. โBut youโre learning.โ
Around them, the base returns to normal. Engines roar. Orders bark. The noise of routine resumes. But everyone moves differently now. With respect.
Holly stands, brushes off her hands.
โI need a drink,โ she says.
Davis nods. โYou buying?โ
โYou still make more than me, hotshot.โ
Together, they walk into the mess hall. The pilot and the ammo girl โ except now, no one thinks sheโs just the girl who loads the belts.
Because now they know.
Sheโs the one who lights the fuse.




