Part 2
The deafening roar of automatic gunfire chewed through the solemn silence of Arlington, shredding the ceremonial flags into ribbons. Screams echoed as heavily decorated generals, men who hadn’t seen the front lines in decades, scrambled for cover behind the white marble headstones. Dirt and stone shrapnel sprayed into the air, biting into my skin.
I didn’t panic. Panic gets you killed; tactical calculation keeps you breathing.
“Get down! Cover the civilians!” I roared at Major Hayes, who was frozen on the grass, stunned by the sudden ambush. I grabbed his collar, violently hauling his heavy frame behind a thick granite monument just as a volley of 5.56 rounds pulverized the earth where he had been lying.
“Who are they?” Hayes choked out, spitting out dirt, his hands trembling as he reached for his sidearm.
“The same people who murdered Colonel Vance,” I said, checking my trauma kit. I didn’t have a rifle, but I had a tactical knife and an electronic frequency jammer disguised as a cleaning pager. I smashed the button on the pager, flooding the local airwaves with static to cut off the shooters’ tactical communication.
Through the chaos, a man in a tailored suit ran toward us, firing a compact pistol at the incoming SUV. It was James Morrison, Deputy Director of the DIA. He slid behind our monument, his face pale, sweat breaking through his makeup.
“Sarah!” he gasped, recognizing me instantly despite my janitor’s disguise. “Thank God you’re alive. The network is completely compromised! They aren’t just here for Vance’s funeral—they’re hunting down every remaining member of Shadow Unit 88. They already hit Miller in Montana and Cross in Alaska. You’re the last one left on American soil!”
A cold dread settled in my stomach. Shadow Unit 88 was being systematically erased from the earth.
“Who is the mole, Morrison?” I demanded, grabbing his lapels, pulling him close as bullets cracked against the stone above us. “Who leaked our biometric data?”
“I don’t know!” Morrison yelled over the gunfire. “But the hit teams have live military satellite tracking. We have less than forty-eight hours before a global clean-up crew eliminates every asset associated with the project.”
Suddenly, a shadow fell over our position. One of the tactical shooters, wearing a black ballistic mask and body armor, rounded the corner of the monument, his rifle raised to execute us.
Instinct took over. I dropped low, sweeping my leg across the wet grass, kicking the shooter’s ankles out from under him. As he crashed down, I drove my knee hard into his sternum, knocking the wind out of his lungs. With a swift twist of my wrists, I wrenched the rifle from his grip, flipped the selector switch to fully automatic, and fired three precise rounds into his throat before he could pull a backup weapon.
“Hayes! Take his comms!” I ordered, throwing the shooter’s radio to the stunned Major.
I stood up, leveling the captured rifle. Two more shooters were advancing through the fog. I squeezed the trigger, letting out two controlled bursts. The first shooter dropped instantly with a double-tap to the chest; the second took a round to the shoulder, spun around, and fell behind a row of headstones.
“We need an extraction now, Morrison!” I shouted, firing suppressing shots toward the SUV.
“A bird is on the way, but they’re jamming our primary military transport!” Morrison replied, checking an encrypted tablet.
“Then use the Cosmic network,” I said flatly.
Morrison went completely rigid, his eyes widening in absolute terror. “How do you know about the Cosmic network? That’s a Joint Chiefs infrastructure restricted to—”
“To the people who authorized my unit to eliminate foreign threats,” I interrupted, staring him down. “I have the encryption codes burned into my memory, Director. Because I wasn’t just the medic. I was the operator who built the firewall.”
Right then, the shooter I had wounded in the shoulder emerged from behind a monument, holding a grenade. Before he could pull the pin, Major Hayes finally found his nerve, firing two rounds from his service pistol, neutralizing the threat.
The engine of the attackers’ SUV roared as the remaining driver realized the hit had failed. The vehicle spun around, kicking up mud, and sped away through the shattered gates of the cemetery. The fog began to clear, revealing a battlefield covered in spent shell casings and groaning, wounded personnel.
But the real shock wave was just about to hit. Morrison’s tablet chimed with a high-priority alert. He looked down at the screen, his face turning an unearthly shade of white. He looked up at me, his hands shaking violently.
“Sarah…” Morrison whispered, his voice cracking with disbelief. “The encryption code that authorized this hit team’s satellite access… it didn’t come from a foreign agency. It was signed off twenty minutes ago using an active biometric signature from inside this very cemetery.”
I narrowed my eyes. “Whose signature?”
Morrison swallowed hard, stepping back from me as if I were a monster. “It was signed by Colonel Jack Vance. The man we are burying today.”
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