I opened the note, and my knees almost gave out when I saw what was written in handwriting I knew better than my own.
“If anything ever happens to me, find my daughter. She’ll have the ring. And if she shows up—help her.”
My throat tightens, and I fight the sudden sting in my eyes. The rain pouring down around us is nothing compared to the storm behind my ribs. My father’s handwriting. His final words. Carried by this man for two decades like a weight chained to his soul.
Colonel Hayes stares at me as if he’s looking at a ghost. “Your father was the best soldier I ever trained,” he says quietly. “He saved my life more than once.”
I clench the note, swallowing the lump in my throat. “He died in a ditch in Kandahar. They never recovered the body. Just… this ring.”
The Colonel nods slowly. “I know. I was there. I saw him go down.”
For a moment, neither of us speaks. The only sound is the rain hitting the gravel, and the distant echoes of recruits running drills somewhere on the other side of the compound.
Then, something in him changes.
“Come with me,” he says, his voice lower, tighter. “Now.”
I follow him, boots squelching in the mud, my uniform soaked and sticking to my skin. We cut across the yard and into the old command barracks. The doors slam behind us with a metallic bang. Inside, it’s dim and smells like dust and gun oil.
He leads me down a narrow hallway and into a locked room marked RESTRICTED ACCESS. He keys in a code, pushes the door open, and gestures for me to enter.
What I see inside steals the breath from my lungs.
The room is a mini war room. Screens flicker with surveillance feeds. Walls are lined with maps dotted in red pins. In the center, a long table covered in folders, photographs, and a half-disassembled rifle.
Hayes shuts the door and turns to me, expression grim.
“Your father didn’t just die,” he says. “He was betrayed. And he died protecting something—someone—far more important than we realized at the time.”
I freeze. “What are you talking about?”
He walks to the table and pulls out a manila folder. It’s old. Edges curled, stamped CLASSIFIED. He opens it slowly, revealing black-and-white photos of a younger version of my father… standing beside Hayes, another man with his face scribbled out in marker, and what looks like a child in the background—me.
“He found something in Kandahar,” Hayes continues. “Intel that was never supposed to see the light of day. Your father refused to be part of the cover-up. So they sent him on that mission with no backup and no intention of bringing him home.”
The weight of the revelation crushes me. “You knew this. And you said nothing.”
“I couldn’t,” he snaps. “They were watching me too. But I kept the note. I hoped… one day, you’d show up.”
I pace, mind spinning, heart thudding. “Why me? Why now?”
“Because,” he says, reaching for a second file. “They’re still out there. The ones who buried your father. And now, they’re watching you.”
He throws a photo onto the table. It’s grainy, taken from what looks like a surveillance camera outside the base gates. A man in a dark coat. Sunglasses. But there’s no mistaking it—he’s staring directly at the camera.
“This was taken two nights ago,” Hayes says. “Same man was seen in Kabul twenty years ago, right before your father died.”
My blood runs cold. “He’s still alive.”
Hayes nods. “And if he knows who you are, he won’t stop until you’re silenced.”
I step back from the table, adrenaline already surging through my veins. “So what do we do?”
He gives me a look—sharp, assessing, like he’s seeing me for the first time. “We train. I can’t protect you forever, and I won’t insult your father’s memory by coddling you. You’re here now. That means you fight.”
“Good,” I say. “Because I didn’t come to hide. I came to finish what he started.”
The next two weeks are hell.
Hayes pushes me harder than any of the other recruits. He trains me separately—early mornings, brutal nights. While the rest sleep, I’m disassembling rifles blindfolded. I’m memorizing enemy patterns, running reconnaissance simulations, learning languages I never knew I’d need.
I bleed. I bruise. I push past every limit I thought I had.
The recruits stop laughing. They watch from a distance now—some with curiosity, others with fear. I see it in their eyes when I pass. They know something’s different.
But it’s not until the live fire drill that everything changes.
It’s supposed to be standard—a mock village setup, enemy targets, controlled environment. But five minutes in, I know something’s wrong.
The rounds are too loud. The explosions too close.
Then I see it—one of the “enemy” actors slumps and doesn’t move. The blood pooling beneath him is real.
“Live rounds!” I shout. “This isn’t a drill!”
Panic erupts. Screams echo across the training yard. Recruits scatter. One drops to the ground, hit in the shoulder. I grab his arm and drag him behind cover.
Then I see the man in the black coat.
He’s standing at the edge of the field, watching. Just watching.
My rage boils over.
I snatch a fallen M4 from the ground, check the mag, and take off running. Hayes’s voice yells something behind me, but I don’t stop.
The man turns and disappears into the tree line.
I chase him through the woods, leaping over roots, ducking branches. My breath is fire in my lungs, but I don’t care. I catch glimpses of his coat ahead—always just out of reach.
Then, suddenly, he stops.
He’s standing in a clearing, back to me. Calm. Waiting.
I raise my weapon. “Don’t move!”
He turns slowly, hands out. Smiling. “You look just like him,” he says.
My finger tightens on the trigger.
“Do it,” he says. “But know this—your father’s death was only the beginning. There are others. Still inside. Still pulling strings.”
“Names,” I demand. “Give me names.”
He laughs. “Too late. They know you’re here. They’re coming.”
I step forward. “Then I’ll be ready.”
He moves—fast—but I’m faster.
One shot.
He drops.
Hayes and a security team burst into the clearing seconds later, weapons drawn. They take in the body, my trembling hands, the smoking rifle.
Hayes walks up beside me, nodding slowly. “Your father would be proud.”
But I’m not done.
I turn to him, eyes burning. “This isn’t over.”
“No,” he agrees. “It’s just begun.”
We return to the base. The investigation into the attack begins. The dead attacker’s ID matches a rogue agent long presumed dead. The breach raises alarms in every intel agency on the continent.
But for me, it’s confirmation.
My father died for something buried deep. And I’m going to dig it out.
Hayes pulls strings. I’m reassigned to an elite task force, one buried under more red tape than a Pentagon file room. My new orders are simple: infiltrate, expose, eliminate.
Each day, I train harder.
Each night, I read my father’s old letters. His notes. His maps.
And I wear his ring like armor.
They thought I was weak. A joke.
They were wrong.
Because now—they know my name. And soon… they’ll know what I’m capable of.




