The Admiral looked down. His face drained of color. He looked at his trusted Lieutenant, then back at the photos. “Lock the doors,” the Admiral rasped. Because the photos didn’t just show the Lieutenant meeting with the enemy… they showed who his father really was.
The Admiralโs order echoes through the room like a gunshot.
The Lieutenant blinks. โSir?โ
โI said lock the damn doors,โ the Admiral repeats, louder now, the weight of betrayal thick in his voice.
Two Marines outside snap to attention and swing the doors shut with a heavy clang. The room suddenly feels smaller, heavier.
The woman doesnโt move. She watches the Lieutenant the way a panther watches a twitching rabbit. Her duffel remains on the table, unzipped now, but no one is foolish enough to make a move.
The Admiral lifts the top photo again. It’s grainy, taken at night. But itโs unmistakableโthe Lieutenant, younger, standing in a jungle clearing. Next to him is a man with a scar down his cheek, wearing an enemy uniform. The next photo shows them shaking hands. The third shows a briefcase. The fourth shows blood.
โYou told us he was dead,โ the Admiral whispers. โYou told us your father died in a car crash when you were a kid.โ
The Lieutenantโs voice is quiet, measured. โHe did, Sir. Thatโs what my mother told me.โ
โNo,โ the woman says, stepping forward. โHe changed his name. He fled. And you knew. You didnโt find out yesterday or last week. You knew back then. You knew during the โ99 op. And you told him. You gave him our location.โ
โThatโs insane,โ the Lieutenant says, his hand still hovering near his weapon. โYouโve been gone twenty years. Who the hell are you to walk in here and accuseโโ
โYou think I donโt remember your voice?โ she cuts in. โYou think I didnโt hear it in my earpiece, whispering that we were compromisedโjust seconds before the ambush started? You were barely out of the Academy, shadowing your father in South Asia under a civilian cover. You were the leak.โ
โEnough,โ the Admiral growls, but no one listens.
The Lieutenantโs hand twitches toward his pistol.
In one motion, she yanks a second item from the duffelโa battered recorderโand slams it on the table. A soft click, and the room fills with static. Then a voice crackles through. A young manโs voice. Nervous. Urgent.
โTheyโre moving in now. The womanโAvaโs her name, sheโs leading the team. Coordinates are attached. Confirm transfer after theyโre neutralizedโฆโ
The Admiral stares at the speaker like itโs a ghost.
The Lieutenantโs face goes pale.
โVoiceprint matches you,โ Ava says, her voice steady. โRecorded by an allied informant. My extraction went south. But he survived long enough to get that out.โ
โYouโฆ you disappeared,โ the Lieutenant says, his voice cracking now. โThey said no one survived. You werenโt supposed to survive.โ
โI did,โ she says. โI spent five years in a prison camp. Then another ten tracking down every piece of the puzzle. I buried teammates. I saw my best friend shot in the neck beside me. Because of you.โ
He bolts.
In a blur of movement, he throws the table over and dives for the door. But he doesnโt get far.
Ava is already moving. She grabs her duffel and swings it like a hammer. It catches him in the ribs and sends him sprawling. He tries to crawl for his weapon, but her boot slams down on his wrist.
โYou donโt get to run,โ she snarls.
Two Marines rush in. One secures his sidearm, the other cuffs him, rough and fast.
The Admiral sinks into the chair, rubbing his eyes. โJesus Christโฆโ
Ava doesnโt let her guard down. Not yet.
โHe fed your entire deployment list to the enemy,โ she says. โTwo ops went bad because of him. People died. All to cover his father’s past and secure favors with mercenary intel brokers. He didnโt do it for a cause. He did it for greed.โ
The Lieutenant glares at her as heโs dragged upright. Blood is trickling from a split lip. โYou think youโre a hero,โ he spits. โYouโre nothing. Youโre a ghost with a grudge.โ
โAnd youโre a traitor,โ she says. โBut Iโm not the one whoโll judge you.โ
She turns to the Admiral.
He doesnโt look up. โTake him to the brig. Iโll call ONI. Thisโฆ this goes straight to the top.โ
The guards drag the Lieutenant away, his shouts fading down the hall.
Silence falls.
Ava finally exhales. Her fingers tremble slightly as she picks up the fallen recorder. She powers it off and slides it back into her bag.
The Admiral lifts his eyes. โI thought you were dead.โ
โI was,โ she says. โJust not all the way.โ
He studies her face. The lines that werenโt there twenty years ago. The scar along her jaw, half-hidden beneath her collar.
โI approved that mission,โ he says, barely a whisper. โYou werenโt supposed to be there. You volunteered after your brother died.โ
She nods. โAnd I survived where others didnโt. Iโve spent two decades wondering why. And now I know.โ
โYou shouldโve come back sooner.โ
โI couldnโt. I needed to finish it myself.โ
He leans back in his chair. โYou just walked into a hornetโs nest.โ
She shrugs. โDidnโt feel like waiting for a subpoena.โ
He chuckles despite himself. โStill the same. Ava Monroe. The only woman who ever scared half my command staff into obedience.โ
โI didn’t come back for medals,โ she says. โI just needed the truth exposed.โ
The Admiral straightens up. โAnd now?โ
She glances at the window. The rain has stopped. The sun is starting to burn through the gray.
โI donโt know,โ she admits. โMaybe disappear for real this time. Maybeโฆ rest.โ
โYou wonโt be forgotten,โ he says. โIโll see to that. Your name, your team. The ones who died. Iโll make sure theyโre honored.โ
She nods, grateful but tired.
โYou were the best we had,โ he says softly. โAnd we buried you with no answers.โ
โI wasnโt looking for closure,โ she says. โI was looking for justice.โ
โAnd you got it.โ
She slings the duffel over her shoulder and walks toward the door.
The Admiral watches her go, then calls out, โAva.โ
She pauses.
โIf you ever want back inโฆ the doorโs open.โ
She smiles faintly without turning. โThat part of me died in the jungle.โ
And then she walks out.
The air outside is crisp, cool. The base is buzzing with energy, but she moves through it like a shadow.
Somewhere in the back of her mind, the ghosts are quieter now.
She steps off the base, out into the waiting morning.
No medals. No applause. Just peace. And that, at last, is enough.




