I DIDN’T DODGE THE SLAP. I LET IT LAND

But standing there, alone in that hallway with armed guards appearing at every exit, I realized the truth: I wasn’t the one exposing them. I was the bait.

The corridor around me pulses with red light as if the base itself is breathing. The guardsโ€”two on each endโ€”donโ€™t move, but I feel their eyes tracking me like lasers. I square my shoulders and take one slow breath, then another. Iโ€™m still standing. Thatโ€™s more than I can say for Hastings.

Phase two.

That voice on the radio wasnโ€™t someone Iโ€™d ever heard before, but the authority in it didnโ€™t need a name. Whoever they are, they outrank everyone Iโ€™ve dealt with so far. That should terrify me. Instead, it steadies something inside me. Because if thereโ€™s a phase two, it means this rabbit hole goes deeperโ€”and Iโ€™ve already made the first cut.

I turn left at the end of the hall, and the guards part like a sensor knows Iโ€™m coming. No one stops me. No one speaks. I pass the operations roomโ€”dark. The comms centerโ€”locked. The infirmaryโ€”quiet. Itโ€™s like the base has exhaled all its personnel into the void, leaving only a skeleton crew and silence in its wake.

Then, as I reach the old archive wing, my radio buzzes again.

โ€œRoom 7B. You have five minutes.โ€

Iโ€™ve never even been in the archive wing. Itโ€™s where paper files go to die. No computers. No digital anything. Just stacks of forgotten records behind reinforced doors and yellowing bulbs that hum with age. I find the door to 7B and push it open.

It creaks like something out of a war movie.

Inside, the air smells of dust, metal, and something elseโ€”ozone, maybe. Thereโ€™s a single fluorescent strip light overhead, flickering slightly. A table in the center. Two chairs. And sitting in one of them: the woman in the dark suit. The same one from the briefing room.

โ€œClose the door,โ€ she says without looking up from the file sheโ€™s reading.

I do.

She gestures to the empty chair. โ€œSit, Captain.โ€

I sit, spine straight, hands on my thighs. Her fingers are delicate, but they turn the pages with surgical precision. Finally, she closes the file and meets my eyes.

โ€œYou did well.โ€

Itโ€™s not praise. Itโ€™s evaluation. Like sheโ€™s ticking a box.

I wait.

She places a black badge on the table. It bears no insignia. No name. Just a silver outline of a bird mid-dive.

โ€œYouโ€™ve been vetted for over a year,โ€ she says. โ€œYou didnโ€™t know it, but every decision you made led here. The slap was your final test.โ€

I blink. โ€œExcuse me?โ€

โ€œWe needed to know if youโ€™d prioritize justice over fear. Protocol over pride. Exposure over retaliation.โ€

I swallow. โ€œYou used me.โ€

She doesnโ€™t deny it. โ€œWe used your position. Your record. Your instincts. Not you.โ€

My jaw tightens. โ€œWhat the hell is phase two?โ€

She leans forward, folding her hands on the table. โ€œRavenrock was the first domino. Operation Clearwater has branches in seven bases. Hastings was mid-level. The men above himโ€”real powerโ€”theyโ€™ve covered their tracks for over a decade. We needed a fracture point. You created it.โ€

I shake my head slowly. โ€œYou want me to go undercover.โ€

โ€œNo,โ€ she says, and her smile is almost sad. โ€œYou already are.โ€

A cold weight settles in my stomach. โ€œWhat do you mean?โ€

She stands, smooths her blazer, and circles the table. โ€œPhase two isnโ€™t an investigation, Captain. Itโ€™s an extraction.โ€

โ€œOf who?โ€

โ€œYou.โ€

My breath catches. โ€œIโ€™m not leaving. You said yourselfโ€”I cracked it open.โ€

She stops behind me. โ€œAnd now that itโ€™s open, it will crush you if you stay. Every leak, every shadow file, every shred of testimony youโ€™ve uncovered has your name on it. If we pull you now, we can keep the story alive. If we wait, you disappear in a โ€˜training accident.โ€™โ€

I push up from the chair. โ€œNo. Iโ€™m not running.โ€

She walks to the door and opens it. โ€œThen youโ€™re not hearing me.โ€

The light shifts.

Outside, two more people are waiting. Men in civilian clothing, but I clock the postureโ€”former special forces. Theyโ€™re not here to hurt me. Theyโ€™re here to move me.

I take one last look at the room, then at the woman. โ€œIf I go, this dies. You know that.โ€

She reaches into her pocket and hands me a keycard. โ€œThatโ€™s your contingency. Storage locker 112-B in D.C. If anything happens to you, its contents are automatically transmitted to three major news outlets. We donโ€™t leave our people in the cold, Mitchell.โ€

That name againโ€”Mitchell. Iโ€™m not sure if it even fits anymore.

But I pocket the card.

The woman nods once. โ€œYouโ€™ll be briefed en route. We leave in two.โ€

And just like that, Iโ€™m walking through the base like a ghost. No one looks at me. No one salutes. The lockdown lifts without ceremony, and weโ€™re out in the open air, climbing into a nondescript black SUV that hums like a predator.

The ride is silent until we pass the perimeter gates.

Then the man in the passenger seat glances back. โ€œDo you know what the next target is?โ€

I shake my head.

โ€œEver heard of Fort Langdon?โ€

โ€œYeah. Missile command. Remote systems. Top security.โ€

He nods. โ€œThatโ€™s what the world thinks. But for the last five years, Langdon has been a testbed for AI-integrated logistics. Entire battalions supplied, deployed, and maintained without human oversight.โ€

I blink. โ€œHow does that relate to Clearwater?โ€

โ€œBecause Langdonโ€™s been using phantom manifests. Supplying troops that donโ€™t exist. Units that draw real fuel, real rations, real munitionsโ€”on paper.โ€

โ€œAnd where do they go?โ€

The man gives a humorless smile. โ€œThatโ€™s what youโ€™re going to find out.โ€

I lean back in my seat, mind racing. Hastings was just a gatekeeper. Langdon is the fortress. And if theyโ€™re feeding ghost units, someoneโ€™s planning something much bigger than embezzlement.

Much darker.

Hours later, Iโ€™m at a safehouse just outside D.C.โ€”a converted farmhouse with encrypted lines and armed guards posing as ranch hands. I barely sleep. I write. I record everything. My notes. My memories. My suspicions. I encrypt it and send it in bursts to three different off-grid locations. If I vanish, someone will know.

But I wonโ€™t vanish.

Because the next morning, I board a military courier jet with new orders, a new name, and a new cover: civilian contractor with DoD systems oversight. My badge says Lauren Mitchell now, not Laura. A meaningless change, but enough to keep the wolves guessing.

At Fort Langdon, everything feels too polished. Too smooth. Like someoneโ€™s already expecting me.

I meet with the base commander, a Brigadier General named Collins. He smiles too much. Never lets go of my hand.

โ€œWeโ€™re honored to have you here, Miss Mitchell. I hear you made quite the impression at Ravenrock.โ€

โ€œJust here to streamline logistics,โ€ I say with a smile of my own. โ€œNothing exciting.โ€

He chuckles. โ€œYouโ€™ll find we run a tight ship here. No irregularities.โ€

Of course you donโ€™t, I think. Because the files are already buried.

But I play my part. I inspect data trails. I poke around the manifest generators. I pretend to question fuel ratios and equipment cycle rates. All the while, Iโ€™m digging. Quietly. Carefully.

And then I find it.

A manifest routed to Unit 78-X. Classified. No attached location. No personnel logs. No exit data. Just a signature from someone six layers above Collins.

The same signature I saw on one of Hastingsโ€™ hidden reports.

The shipment includes experimental targeting modules. Not defensive. Not for training. Live combat-grade.

And itโ€™s leaving tomorrow.

I download the files. Encrypt them. Send them to the same caches.

Then I pull the emergency line.

The woman in the dark suit answers after two rings. โ€œReport.โ€

โ€œTheyโ€™re arming something that doesnโ€™t exist,โ€ I say. โ€œUnit 78-X isnโ€™t real. But the gear is.โ€

Sheโ€™s silent for a moment. Then: โ€œGet out. Now.โ€

โ€œI canโ€™t. If I run, theyโ€™ll vanish again.โ€

โ€œNo,โ€ she says. โ€œIf you stay, theyโ€™ll kill you.โ€

I lower my voice. โ€œThen make it worth it.โ€

An hour later, the power flickers.

Every camera on base goes dark.

And I move.

Iโ€™m in the back records room when the first explosion hits. Controlled. Small. Just enough to panic. Enough to draw everyone out.

While theyโ€™re chasing shadows, I slip into the logistics wing and plant a tracker on the outbound crate for Unit 78-X.

The crate already sits on a flatbed truck.

As I step away, a voice behind me says, โ€œYou shouldโ€™ve run.โ€

Collins.

Gun drawn.

I raise my hands slowly. โ€œDonโ€™t do this.โ€

He doesnโ€™t answer.

But then his radio crackles.

โ€œAll stations, stand down. We have control.โ€

His eyes widen. โ€œWhatโ€”?โ€

The next second, heโ€™s tackled from the side by a black-clad operator. A dozen more flood the room.

CID. Real this time.

The crate is secured. Collins is cuffed.

And Iโ€™m standing in the middle of a storm I helped build.

Hours later, back at the safehouse, the woman in the suit meets me again.

โ€œWeโ€™ve traced the phantom units to a shell company in Ankara,โ€ she says. โ€œTheyโ€™ve been testing the idea of deniable armies. Disposable battalions. Automated war.โ€

โ€œAnd Hastings?โ€ I ask.

โ€œDead,โ€ she says. โ€œSlipped in the shower. Thatโ€™s what theyโ€™re calling it.โ€

I nod. I donโ€™t feel satisfaction. Just purpose.

โ€œWhat happens now?โ€

She hesitates, then hands me a file. Itโ€™s blank on the outside.

Inside, one sentence:

“Phase three begins at dawn.”

And underneath it, my name.

The real one.

Captain Laura Mitchell.

I close the folder.

This time, Iโ€™m not the bait.

Iโ€™m the blade.