When he rushed to check on Lena, the bunker door was ajar. And thenโฆ her voice came over comms. But it wasnโt her voice. Not the one he knew. Calm. Cold. Commanding. โDaniel,โ she said. โStop looking for shelter. Youโre already inside the trap.โ And in her hand? A weapon that shouldnโt even exist on U.S. soilโlet alone at Grayson.
Daniel freezes. His breath fogs in the dim bunker light, his hand hovering over his sidearm. Every instinct sharpened by decades in black-ops training screams that this is wrongโall of it. Lenaโs voice in his ear is calm, surgical. Calculated like an assassinโs heartbeat. And sheโs right.
He is already inside the trap.
โLena,โ he says into his comm, hoping for even a flicker of recognition. โYou donโt have to do this.โ
But the voice that returns isnโt the woman who once whispered secrets into his chest at 3 a.m. Itโs a stranger wearing her skin.
โI told you,โ she says coolly. โIโm just visiting my grandson.โ
That line.
He replays it in his head like a ghost note in a jazz songโoff-beat, deliberate, code. The kind of phrase you only drop if youโre hiding something under layers of scripted memory.
But he doesnโt have time to decode it.
Because outside the bunker, more explosions ripple through the compound. Screams. Gunfire. Thenโsilence. Deafening silence.
Cross yanks open the gear cabinet and pulls out an M4 and two flashbangs. Thereโs no playbook for this. Not when your own people turn the base into a war zone. Not when the woman you once loved is The Ghostโa legend whispered about in counterintelligence circles, blamed for high-profile assassinations from Berlin to Bogotรก. Until now, no one had ever seen her.
No one had lived to.
He climbs the ladder from the bunker into the dim light of the command hall. The ceilingโs half collapsed. Blood streaks the white tile. Harrow is downโhis body slumped over the central comms panel, eyes open, mouth agape in disbelief. Still clutching a shredded folder marked Zeta Protocols.
Cross swallows hard and checks his pulse.
Gone.
He barely has time to breathe when the monitors flicker to life. All of them.
Every screen displays the same imageโLenaโs face, calm and unreadable, behind black tactical glass.
โZeta Protocols are no longer secure,โ she says, her voice echoing through the shattered ops center. โYou have five minutes, Daniel. After that, this site becomes a crater. Iโm sorry.โ
He stares at her, sweat starting to bead at the back of his neck. โWhy are you warning me?โ
But sheโs already gone.
He scrambles to the computer and starts typing. Zeta Protocols werenโt just surveillance dataโthey were the keys to sleeper agents embedded in Eurasia. Identities, locations, activation codes. If Lena got her hands on thatโฆ
No. When she got her hands on itโit was already over.
Unlessโ
He punches in his clearance code. Level Four override. Denied. Tries Harrowโs access, dead man switch still warm in his palm. Bingo. The screen blinks green.
Self-destruct disabled.
For now.
A sound behind himโa metallic click.
Cross turns slowly, weapon up.
Lena stands in the hallway, no longer wearing the Fifth Avenue coat. Now itโs black tactical armor. Custom fit. Lightweight. Unmarked. In her hands, that weaponโthe one he couldnโt nameโhumms softly, the barrel glowing like a dying star.
โI hoped youโd try to fight,โ she says, stepping closer. โBut I also hoped youโd run.โ
โWhy, Lena?โ he whispers. โWe trusted you. I trusted you.โ
Something flashes in her eyes. Almost regret. Almost.
โI told you once,โ she says, โyou donโt build a life in the shadows. You survive. Thatโs all.โ
His knuckles whiten around his rifle, but he doesnโt raise it.
โYouโre The Ghost,โ he says. โBut why come here? Why now?โ
She exhales slowly. โBecause Grayson wasnโt just listening. It was replicating. Every signal, every codeโฆ every kill order.โ
She flicks her wrist, and a holographic display lights the air between them. Names scroll pastโdozens of them. Coordinates. Time stamps. And pictures.
People.
Civilians. Targets. Collateral.
โWe were supposed to protect them,โ she says, her voice shaking now. โNot erase them from the world.โ
โYou went rogue.โ
โNo. I woke up. And I gave them a choice. I gave you a choice. Leave the bunker. Let it burn. Walk away.โ
โAnd if I donโt?โ
She raises the weapon.
Thenโa gunshot cracks through the hallway.
Not from her weapon.
A second shot follows. Cross hits the deck, rolls, aimsโtoo slow.
Lenaโs already sprinted to the side, the mysterious weapon skidding across the floor. Sheโs not the one who fired.
From the shadows behind her steps Mika Tanaka, Crossโs recon specialist. Bleeding from a head wound, her arm dangling uselessly, but still standing.
โI knew she was a spook,โ Mika growls. โShe sipped the coffee too slow.โ
Lena snarls and launches forward, but Cross intercepts her mid-stride. They crash into the comms room, glass and cables flying. She fights like a ghost tooโsilent, fast, brutal.
But so does he.
And this time, he fights like a man with nothing left to lose.
They slam against the steel wall. She elbows him in the ribs. He headbutts her. Her blade flashes, grazing his cheek. Blood spatters the wall.
But when he looks her in the eye againโฆ he sees it.
She hesitates.
Thatโs all he needs.
Cross drives her back, pins her arm, rips the weapon from her grasp. The hum dies instantly. Sheโs panting now, her lip split, her face pale.
โDo it,โ she gasps. โEnd it.โ
He shakes his head.
โYou donโt get off that easy.โ
Outside, the compound lights flicker again. Backup generators kick in. Reinforcements arriveโan emergency response unit out of Fairbanks, finally tracking the emergency beacon Mika managed to trigger before the first blast. Cross hears the rotors before he sees them. Feels the rush of air through the shattered roof.
Lena slumps to her knees, defeated but not broken.
โYou donโt understand,โ she says. โTheyโll come. Others. I wasnโt alone.โ
Cross lowers the weapon. โThen weโll be ready.โ
He turns to Mika. โSecure her.โ
Mika limps forward, zip ties in hand. โWith pleasure.โ
Within minutes, the compound is crawling with black ops retrieval teams. Bodies are bagged. Survivors accounted for. The wounded airlifted. Snow buries the evidence before sunrise.
Lena sits in the rear of a reinforced transport, hands cuffed, eyes vacant. She doesnโt speak again. Doesnโt fight.
Just stares.
Cross watches her from the tarmac, arms folded, heart bruised.
She saved him once. Warned him, in her own way. She chose not to kill him.
That means something.
But it doesnโt change what she did.
As the vehicle door seals shut, she lifts her eyes to him one last time.
Mouths two words.
โFind it.โ
Then sheโs gone.
He stands there, wind whipping through the wreckage of Camp Grayson, Lenaโs final words echoing in his ears.
He doesnโt know what she meant.
But he knows this isnโt over.
Because deep in the wreckage, beneath the severed wires and ash, the real weapon might not have been that glowing barrel after all.
It might have been the truth.
And The Ghost just gave him a trail.


