My name is Captain Casey “Viper” Callahan, though looking at me right now, you’d think I was a fugitive who had just crawled out of a highway pileup.
The desert sun at Kandahar Airfield was baking the tarmac to a blistering hundred and ten degrees, but my palm felt icy cold pressed against the dark gray titanium nose of the F-15E Strike Eagle, tail number 802. My jet.
“Step away from the fifty-million-dollar aircraft, ma’am! Hands where I can see them! Do it now!”
The voice barked from ten yards behind me. I didn’t turn around immediately. Every millimeter of rotation in my torso sent a blinding, jagged spike of white-hot agony through my left side. Three cracked ribs. Grade-two concussion. A fresh, sluggish trickle of dark arterial blood was still seeping through the torn fabric of my civilian flannel shirt, staining the waistband of my tactical trousers.
“I said step back!”
Heavy combat boots slapped against the concrete. Before I could brace myself, a gloved hand clamped onto my right shoulder and yanked me backward. The physical torque spun me around. The sudden shift in gravity rattled my bruised skull, making my vision swim with black static.
I blinked hard, forcing the world back into focus. Standing in front of me was a young Air Force Security Forces sergeant—nameplate reading VANCE—his M4 carbine held at the low-ready, his knuckles white against the grip. To him, I was a localized security breach. A battered civilian wandering onto a restricted flight line.
“ID,” Vance demanded, his voice trembling with that dangerous mix of adrenaline and protocol. “Show me your base badge. Right now.”
“Don’t have it,” I said. My voice sounded like gravel grinding in a blender. “Lost it in the dirt about six miles east of the perimeter.”
Vance’s jaw tightened. He reached for his shoulder radio with one hand while keeping his grip locked on my collarbone. “Dispatch, this is Unit Four. I have an unauthorized female on Pad Nine, making direct physical contact with Bird 802. Suspect is injured, non-compliant, refusing identification—”
“That’s my bird, Vance,” I interrupted quietly.
Before he could process the sheer audacity of the statement, the base’s master klaxon screamed.
AHOOGA! AHOOGA! AHOOGA!
“SCRAMBLE! SCRAMBLE! SCRAMBLE! Troops in Contact in Sector Four! All available CAS units, immediate launch!”
The tarmac instantly erupted into controlled pandemonium. Pilots sprinted past us. Fuel trucks screeched.
Vance panicked. The siren was deafening, the stakes had just multiplied by a thousand, and he was holding a bleeding woman next to a live munitions payload. He shoved me hard against the landing gear strut to pin me down. “Ma’am, get on the ground! Do not move!”
My broken ribs slammed against the hydraulic housing. I gasped, tasting copper.
Just as Vance drew his zip-ties to cuff my wrists, heavy footsteps thundered toward us from the hangar.
“Vance, get your damn hands off her!” a voice roared.
Part 2
The man sprinting toward us was Master Sergeant Jax Bradley, the veteran lead maintenance chief for the 391st Fighter Squadron. He didn’t just look angry; he looked like a man who had just watched a ghost materialize out of the shimmering midday heat waves.
Bradley didn’t care about Vance’s drawn weapon or military hierarchy. He shoved his massive, grease-stained forearm right between Vance’s chest and my bruised shoulder, breaking the young sergeant’s physical hold on me with a sharp, violent jerk.
“Back the hell up, Vance!” Bradley bellowed, his chest heaving as he planted his boots into the concrete like a protective shield. “Put that damn zip-tie away right now before I wrap it around your neck!”
“Senior Master Sergeant, she’s an unidentified—”
“That is Captain Casey Callahan!” Bradley roared over the deafening, earth-shaking scream of a taxiing cargo plane fifty yards away. “She is the designated aircraft commander for eight-zero-two! Stand down!”
Vance froze, his jaw going slack as his eyes darted back to me. The plastic zip-tie slipped a fraction of an inch in his rigid fingers. “Captain? But… command issued a base-wide BOLO two hours ago. They said a Strike Eagle went down in the Korengal foothills. They said the crash site was a total loss.”
“I didn’t stay at the crash site,” I replied.
My voice was steadier now, though drawing oxygen into my lungs felt like inhaling broken glass. I reached down, my trembling fingers gripping the hem of my torn flannel shirt, and pulled it up just enough to reveal the tight, blood-soaked field dressing wrapped tightly around my midsection. “I ejected at four hundred feet when my canopy shattered. I walked six miles through the dry wadi to get back through the South Gate because the perimeter transport truck got blown to pieces.”
Vance looked utterly horrified, his rigid military posture instantly deflating into profound, agonizing embarrassment. “Ma’am… I am so sorry, I had no idea—”
“Save it, Sergeant. You did your job,” I said, coughing a dry, raspy bark.
Bradley turned to me, his rugged face etched with pure, unadulterated panic. “Captain, you look like hell. Medical dispatched an emergency ambulance to the perimeter gate twenty minutes ago looking for you. You have a severe Grade-2 concussion. You shouldn’t even be standing upright, let alone touching this bird.”
“The bird is prepped, Jax?” I asked, completely ignoring his makeshift medical diagnosis.
“Prepped, fueled, and armed to the teeth with GBU-31 joint direct attack munitions,” Bradley said, wiping a stream of dirty sweat from his forehead. “We had her ready for the afternoon rotation, but Callahan… you are medically disqualified. The moment you step on this crew ladder, the automated tracking system logs a Class-A flight violation.”
“Then override the system,” I demanded.
Before Bradley could formulate a protest, Vance’s tactical shoulder radio crackled to life with the high-pitched, unmistakable tone of a priority command override.
“All units, this is Command Post. Be advised, we have a catastrophic situation developing in Sector Four. Outpost Viper is taking heavy mortar and rocket-propelled grenade fire from a battalion-sized enemy element. Air support is twenty minutes out. Repeat, twenty minutes out. Friendly troops are in imminent danger of being overrun.”
I didn’t ask permission. I snatched Vance’s radio mic right off his tactical vest, pulling his torso half a step forward by the coiled wire. “Command Post, this is Nighthawk One-Zero. I am standing on Pad Nine with Bird 802. Requesting immediate clearance to taxi and launch for Sector Four close air support.”
There was a dead, agonizing five-second silence on the encrypted frequency.
Then, the duty officer’s voice came back, cold, rigid, and bureaucratic: “Negative, Nighthawk. Your medical clearance is flagged red. Base Surgeon has placed a hard grounding order on your profile. Security Forces on Pad Nine: detain Captain Callahan and escort her to the base trauma bay immediately. That is a direct order.”
Vance looked at his radio, then looked at my bloodied face. The young sergeant was caught in an impossible, soul-crushing vise: obey a direct order from the Command Post, or physically tackle a decorated combat pilot while American soldiers were dying just a few miles over the horizon.
Slowly, Vance raised his trembling hand toward my arm again. “Captain… please don’t make me do this.”
I didn’t back away. I stepped directly into his reach, closing the distance until my chest was an inch from his rifle receiver. “Listen to the background noise on that dispatch radio, Vance,” I whispered fiercely.
Through his tactical earpiece, leaking just loud enough for the three of us to hear over the idling auxiliary power units, came the frantic, screaming voice of a young infantryman calling for final protective fire over the tactical net.
That was the dark twist nobody at the Command Post realized yet.
“That’s the 101st Airborne Recon squad,” I told Vance, staring straight into his panicked eyes. “That is the exact squad that spent the last four hours holding a bloody ridge so I could crawl out of that burning wreckage alive. They stayed behind to cover my exfil. If I go to that hospital, those boys die.”
Vance’s hand hovered in the dry air, shaking violently.
Suddenly, the base’s giant public address speakers clicked with a sharp, metallic pop. A new, unmistakably deep voice echoed across the entire flight line—the Wing Commander himself.
“Security Forces on Pad Nine… disregard previous directive.”
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Part 3
The public address system hummed with static for half a second before General Thomas Sterling’s voice cut through the heavy desert air again, carrying the absolute weight of a man making a career-ending gamble.
“Security Forces on Pad Nine, release the pilot. Master Sergeant Bradley, initiate emergency launch sequence for Bird eight-zero-two. Captain Callahan… your medical waiver is retroactively approved. Go get our people.”
The radio clicked off.
For a heartbeat, nobody moved. The scorching wind whipped a cloud of fine Afghan dust across the concrete. Then, Sergeant Vance slowly took his finger off the trigger guard of his M4. He stepped back, snapped his heels together, and rendered the most sharply executed, razor-straight salute I had ever seen.
“Clearance verified, ma’am,” Vance said, his voice thick with a sudden, overwhelming surge of respect. “Give ’em hell.”
“Count on it, Sergeant,” I said.
I turned to the ladder. That was when the real war began.
Adrenaline is a magnificent liar, but it has a short expiration date. As I raised my right boot to the first aluminum rung of the boarding ladder, my nervous system finally decided to present the full bill for the morning’s activities. A blinding, nauseating wave of vertigo washed over me. My vision narrowed into a dark tunnel. My cracked ribs felt like hot daggers grinding against my lungs. My knees buckled.
Before I could hit the tarmac, two massive hands caught me from behind.
Master Sergeant Bradley hoisted me upward by the straps of my tactical vest, essentially carrying my dead weight up the side of the F-15E. “I’ve got you, Cap. Don’t look down. Just breathe. One rung at a time. Come on.”
Together, we fought gravity. With Jax practically shoving my torso over the canopy rail, I tumbled into the front cockpit, slumping heavily into the ACES II ejection seat. The familiar, comforting scent of hydraulic fluid, aged leather, and cold avionics washed over me.
Jax leaned over the side, handing me my flight helmet—retrieved hastily from the squadron line locker. As I pulled the tight foam pads down over my skull, the pressure against my Grade-2 concussion made my teeth ache, but it also locked my senses into place.
I glanced at the rear cockpit mirror. The Weapons Systems Officer seat behind me was completely empty.
Normally, Lieutenant Mark “Dice” Jenkins would be sitting back there, flipping switches and making terrible jokes about my landings. But Dice wasn’t there. Six hours ago, over the jagged peaks of the Korengal, a shoulder-launched surface-to-air missile had shredded our starboard wing. Dice had pulled the lower ejection handle, blasting us both into the freezing morning sky. He had landed hard in a rocky ravine, his parachute tangling in the crags. He didn’t survive the impact.
When the 101st Airborne reconnaissance squad found me dragging his parachute canopy across the rocks, they didn’t ask questions. They set up a defensive perimeter around Dice’s body and told me to run for the extraction zone. They chose to hold the line so a pilot could live.
Now, I was the line.
“APU is running! External power disconnected!” Jax shouted over the rising whine of the jet’s internal systems. He reached in, slapped my shoulder hard enough to leave a bruise, and pulled the safety pins from my ejection seat. “She’s all yours, Nighthawk. Bring her back in one piece!”
“See you in an hour, Jax,” I said, pulling the canopy lever.
The massive glass bubble lowered, sealing me inside a pressurized, quiet world. I flipped the battery switches, engaged the generators, and pushed the twin throttle quadrants forward. Behind me, the two Pratt & Whitney F100 turbofan engines caught fire, erupting into a low, chest-vibrating roar that shook the very aluminum beneath my seat.
Every vibration of the fifty-thousand-pound airframe sent a sympathetic shockwave through my fractured ribs, but the pain wasn’t disabling anymore—it was fuel. It was proof I was still breathing.
“Kandahar Tower, Nighthawk One-Zero, heavy, taxiing Pad Nine for immediate intersection departure, tactical scramble,” I called over the UHF frequency.
“Nighthawk One-Zero, Tower. Winds two-four-zero at twelve. Runway two-three cleared for immediate takeoff. Godspeed, Nighthawk.”
I didn’t bother taxiing to the threshold. I swung the heavy Strike Eagle onto the active runway, lined the nose up with the shimmering heat haze of the horizon, and slammed both throttles forward into Stage 5 full afterburner.
The jet didn’t just accelerate; it detonated.
Thirty-two thousand pounds of raw thrust kicked me squarely in the spine. The sudden, violent G-force pinned my broken torso back against the seat cushions like a hydraulic press. I gritted my teeth, screaming a silent, primal curse through my oxygen mask as the digital airspeed indicator ticked upward with terrifying speed. 80 knots. 120. 160. Rotate.
I pulled back on the stick. The nose wheel lifted.
The Strike Eagle broke its earthly bonds, tearing off the Kandahar tarmac and angling forty-five degrees into the blinding white sky. I sucked the landing gear up, banked hard to the northwest, and felt the cool, frictionless rush of altitude wash over the canopy.
Down on the ground, shrinking into a tiny gray speck, Sergeant Vance was still standing near Pad Nine, watching the twin blue cones of my afterburners scorch the heavens. Jax Bradley was already walking toward the munitions bunker to prep the next jet. In the military machine, everyone held a distinct, vital gear: the rigid cop protecting the perimeter, the exhausted chief keeping the birds alive, and the broken pilot willing to bleed to keep the infantry breathing.
I switched my comms to the tactical air-to-ground network, watching my Heads-Up Display lock onto the coordinates of Outpost Viper.
“Viper Actual, this is Nighthawk One-Zero,” I spoke into the mask, my voice steady, cold, and ready. “Keep your heads down, boys. I’m inbound hot with thirty thousand pounds of hate, and I’ve got the sky.”
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