“SIT DOWN, KARA. THIS ISN’T FOR YOU,” MY FATHER YELLED

My father scoffed, standing up to intervene. “What is she talking about? She’s an administrative officer!” The Captain finally turned to my father. He didn’t look angry. He looked terrified.

He handed my father a file stamped with a clearance level higher than the General had ever seen. “She’s not Admin, General,” the Captain whispered, loud enough for the front row to hear.

“She’s the reason we’re all still breathing.” My father looked at the file, then back at me. His face went pale. He opened his mouth to apologize, but I just walked out.

But when I got home that night, I found a letter on my doorstep from my father that made my blood run cold. It wasn’t an apology. It was a warning that said โ€œTheyโ€™re coming for you. Pack nothing. Donโ€™t trust anyoneโ€”not even me.โ€

The letter is typed. No signature. Just those words, and the faintest smell of my fatherโ€™s cigar smoke embedded in the paper.

I reread it three times, the words digging deeper into my spine until my breath shortens and my instincts kick in. Iโ€™m not scaredโ€”Iโ€™m activated. Thereโ€™s a difference.

I close the door silently behind me and scan the hallway. No footprints. No sign of forced entry. I do a quick sweep of the house. Drawers are untouched, but I can feel it in the airโ€”someoneโ€™s been here besides my father.

I shove the letter into my boot, grab the Glock hidden in the air vent behind the bookshelf, and slip out the back, ditching my phone in the neighborโ€™s trash bin as I go. I canโ€™t afford to be traced. Not if theyโ€™re involved.

Ten minutes later, Iโ€™m inside an abandoned freight depot near Ybor City, where we used to run drills for ghost scenarios. I tap the emergency transponder stitched into my belt. One pulse. Two. Then hold.

Seconds later, a red light blinks above an old vending machine. I yank it open and climb down into the crawlspace below. The hatch slams shut behind me.

โ€œGhost-Thirteen confirmed,โ€ a voice says through a grainy speaker.

โ€œAuthenticate,โ€ I answer.

โ€œRed Leviathan rides west.โ€

I close my eyes. Thatโ€™s the burn code.

Something catastrophic is in motion.

The metal hallway flickers to life with old halogen lights, buzzing like bees overhead. I follow the narrow path until it opens into a hidden ops center, humming with data feeds and encrypted comms. Thereโ€™s only one other person there: Ryder.

He’s in a sleeveless tactical vest, leaning over a terminal. His brown eyes snap up when he sees me. โ€œJesus, Kara. Youโ€™re not supposed to be above ground.โ€

I shrug. โ€œWasnโ€™t my idea. Who tripped the protocol?โ€

He taps a few keys, pulling up satellite footage. โ€œSomeone rerouted a DoD satellite to scan coordinates off the Venezuelan coast. Then piggybacked a sub-layer signal onto it. Classified as solar interference. But it wasnโ€™t.โ€

I lean in. โ€œEMP signature?โ€

โ€œWorse,โ€ he says. โ€œQuantum pulse. Someone just hijacked the Nova Relay.โ€

My stomach drops. The Nova Relay is a multi-orbital communications satellite. A blackout there means global military blindnessโ€”no comms, no GPS, no targeting.

โ€œHow long until it hits mainland systems?โ€ I ask.

โ€œHours. Maybe less. Command thinks itโ€™s a glitch.โ€

I scoff. โ€œOf course they do.โ€

He pauses. โ€œYour father signed the dismissal notice. He shut it down before we could escalate.โ€

My jaw tightens. โ€œThen he either doesnโ€™t understand what heโ€™s looking atโ€”or he does, and heโ€™s protecting something.โ€

I pull the letter from my boot and hand it to Ryder. He scans it, his eyes narrowing.

โ€œYou think he knew theyโ€™d come for you?โ€

โ€œHe knew. The letter says not to trust even him.โ€

We exchange a long glance. That old ache from childhood returns. The push-pull of my fatherโ€™s obsession with secrets. I was never supposed to know who he really was. And maybe I still donโ€™t.

Ryder straightens. โ€œYouโ€™re in the blast zone, Kara. If someoneโ€™s trying to wipe you off the board, itโ€™s because youโ€™re the last variable they canโ€™t control.โ€

โ€œOr because I am the only one who still can stop it.โ€

We run the cross-checks again. One of the sublayer signals routes through an inactive facility in Nevadaโ€”decommissioned years ago. Ghost units used it for off-book training. It shouldnโ€™t be online. But it is.

โ€œTheyโ€™re bouncing signals through the Ghost training ground,โ€ I whisper. โ€œTheyโ€™re using our architecture.โ€

Ryder curses under his breath. โ€œThatโ€™s not rogue. Thatโ€™s internal.โ€

He doesnโ€™t have to say it. I already know. This isnโ€™t foreign interference. This is a mutiny from within.

Suddenly, the lights in the room flicker, then surge. An override warning flashes on Ryderโ€™s terminal.

โ€œSomeoneโ€™s accessing the bunker systems,โ€ he growls.

โ€œShut it down.โ€

โ€œI canโ€™t. Theyโ€™re in.โ€

The monitors go black. Red emergency lights kick in. My hand goes to my Glock automatically. A heavy clang echoes down the hallway.

Thenโ€”footsteps.

Heavy. Unhurried.

Ryder grabs the emergency access codes from his locker and tosses me a secondary data key.

โ€œGo east tunnel. Take the key to Langley. Encrypt it with Code Sigma.โ€

โ€œWhat about you?โ€

He smirks. โ€œIโ€™m bait.โ€

Before I can protest, the wall behind us explodes inward. Smoke and sparks fill the air. I duck, roll, and sprint for the escape shaft, Ryder already firing cover rounds.

The last thing I hear is his voice in my earpiece.

โ€œKeep running, Ghost.โ€

I emerge three miles away, through a storm drain that empties near the shipping yards. Blood is running down my arm, a gash from the explosion, but I donโ€™t stop. I have one goal now: deliver the key. Expose whoever is behind this. And make my father look me in the eye after.

I hijack a dirt bike from a construction site and ride north through the night, switching routes every ten miles. I sleep two hours beneath a bridge, then wake to the buzz of a surveillance drone hovering low across the interstate.

Theyโ€™re scanning by heat signature now.

I dump the bike in a canal and hike six miles to a pre-cleared safehouse outside Jacksonville. There, I upload the contents of the key to a black-site satellite relay. The screen lights up with names.

And one of them hits me like a fist to the gut.

Lt. Colonel Darius Monroe.

My godfather. My fatherโ€™s oldest friend.

He taught me to fire a rifle before I turned nine.

I cross-reference locations. Monroe has been stationed at Fort Bragg for monthsโ€”but the logs donโ€™t match. His IDโ€™s been cloned. The real Monroe is either deadโ€ฆ or helping coordinate the attack.

Either way, the signal routes to a cargo ship docked in Norfolk, Virginia.

I grab another vehicle and drive straight through.

When I reach the docks, itโ€™s just past 3 a.m. The fog is thick. Perfect for a ghost.

I infiltrate the perimeter and climb aboard the ship, ducking under cameras. The main control cabin is locked, but a single guard stands outside. Heโ€™s wearing Monroeโ€™s unit patchโ€”but heโ€™s not military.

Heโ€™s PMC. Private contractor.

Mercenary.

I take him down silently, chokehold and pressure points, no wasted motion. Inside the control cabin, a single hard drive is connected to the shipโ€™s navigation system. Itโ€™s routing an uplink.

I plug in my drive. The encryption is deep, but Ryderโ€™s code slices through. My screen floods with logs.

Red Leviathan. Thatโ€™s the op name.

Theyโ€™re targeting every Ghost operative worldwide. Not just me. Not just Ryder.

A full purge.

And leading the authorization?

General Michael Rourke.

My father.

I stare at the screen, heart pounding.

The man who raised me to serve, who trained me to fight, who once told me I was the only thing he had left after Mom diedโ€ฆ has declared me an enemy of the state.

Unlessโ€ฆ

I dig deeper.

Rourkeโ€™s signature is there. The codes are valid. But the timestamps are off. Some of the orders were issued while he was with me at McDill.

My hands tremble. Theyโ€™ve cloned his access. Someone is framing him.

Thatโ€™s why he warned me.

I pull the hard drive and start planting charges. I wonโ€™t let this vessel be used as a control node. As I move, I hear a groan from the floor below.

I follow the sound and break open a locked hatch.

And there, beaten and zip-tied, is my father.

Barely conscious.

I fall to my knees beside him. โ€œDad. Itโ€™s Kara.โ€

He lifts his head, eyes swollen, lips cracked. โ€œTold youโ€ฆ not to trust even meโ€ฆโ€

I cut his bindings. โ€œYou didnโ€™t sign the orders. They cloned you.โ€

He gives me a weak smile. โ€œTook you long enough.โ€

โ€œI thought you were behind it.โ€

โ€œI would be,โ€ he mutters, โ€œif they hadnโ€™t tried to kill you first.โ€

I help him up, drape his arm over my shoulder.

We barely make it off the ship before the charges blow.

The fireball lights up the bay. Sirens scream in the distance.

We limp to a waiting van parked under a fishing warehouse.

Inside is Ryder. Bloodied, but alive.

We look at each other. No words needed.

Weโ€™re at war nowโ€”with our own.

But weโ€™ve got the drive.

Weโ€™ve got the real General Rourke.

And weโ€™re done playing dress-up.

Because now, Ghost-Thirteen is going dark. And when we come back up, weโ€™re not asking for permission.

Weโ€™re taking our country back.