PART 1 — The Pilot Who Broke the Rules
Slate Ridge Sector 12 had always been a graveyard for aircraft. Its jagged canyons formed a maze of collapsing air currents, sharp wind shear, and narrow tunnels of rock where radar signals died and missile lock warnings came too late. On the morning the crisis began, Bravo Echo 7, a Navy special operations team, was pinned against the canyon wall after an ambush left two members critically wounded. Enemy fighters were entrenched on the ridges, and every extraction attempt had been met with a hail of anti-air fire. Command declared the situation “unrecoverable.” No pilot was authorized to enter Slate 12.
At the operations center, officers stared grimly at the feeds. “If we send a bird in there,” one commander said, “we’re sending it to die.” The room fell silent.
Then someone mentioned the call sign Specter 5.
Lieutenant Colonel Mara Ellison—once one of the most skilled A-10 Thunderbolt II pilots in the fleet—was sitting out a flight suspension after a canyon navigation mishap months earlier. Slate 12 had nearly killed her then. That incident had cost her reputation, and nearly her life.
But when she overheard the distress call from Bravo Echo 7, something in her shifted. Without saluting, without requesting permission, she walked out of the briefing room. The ground crew watched in stunned confusion as she climbed into an aging A-10 that had been stripped down for maintenance checks.
“Ma’am, you’re not cleared to fly—”
“Then look the other way,” she answered, sealing the canopy.
Before the control tower could lock her out, Mara pushed the throttles forward. The Warthog roared off the runway, banking sharply toward the forbidden canyon.
Slate 12 swallowed her in minutes. Air pressure slammed against the wings. Stone walls blurred past her cockpit as she dipped beneath overhangs, dancing through terrain designed to kill aircraft. When enemy gunners opened fire, she responded with the iconic growl of her GAU-8 cannon, shredding multiple firing nests and clearing temporary breathing room for the trapped SEAL team.
Then the threat escalated—a heat-seeking missile launched from deep inside the canyon, tracking straight toward the incoming rescue helicopter. Without hesitation, Mara dove, intercepting the missile’s path and forcing it to chase her instead. She clipped so close to the canyon wall that sparks scraped off her wing.
But as she escaped the blast, her instruments flickered. Something was wrong—terribly wrong. A second signal appeared on her HUD.
Another missile.
But this one wasn’t fired by the enemy.
Who inside the command center had just targeted Mara Ellison—and why?
PART 2 — The Shadow Behind the Radar
The missile warning blared through the cockpit, but Mara had no time to process the betrayal. Slate 12 gave no mercy—every maneuver demanded absolute precision. She forced the A-10 into a steep dive, letting the canyon swallow her once again. The missile followed, hungry and persistent.
“Specter 5, you are NOT cleared for this airspace,” the command tower repeated. But the voice sounded wrong—not tense or afraid—just controlled. Measured. Like someone reading a script.
Mara shut off the comms.
The first priority was keeping the missile away from Bravo Echo 7 and the rescue helicopter. She skimmed the canyon floor at barely thirty feet, pushing the A-10 to limits it was never designed to tolerate. Dust exploded behind her. Stone outcroppings passed inches from her wings. She cut left, rolled, slipped between two converging cliffs—
And the missile struck the rock face instead of her aircraft.
The explosion rattled her teeth. But she was alive.
The SEAL team’s medic came through the emergency channel. “Specter 5, you just saved our skins. But we’re still pinned. Multiple shooters at grid marker 9-Alpha.”
“Copy. Mark smoke.”
A plume of blue rose from the canyon. Mara locked onto the coordinates and made the tightest turn of her career. The A-10 screamed. She lined up the gun and unleashed a controlled burst that shredded enemy fortifications, sending debris tumbling into the ravine. The SEAL team radioed back:
“Targets neutralized. Extraction inbound.”
Mara flew cover above them, absorbing gunfire intended for the helicopter. Her aircraft groaned beneath the punishment—hydraulics leaking, warning lights blinking red, parts of the fuselage torn open. But she stayed until the last operator was aboard the rescue bird.
Only then did she attempt to climb out of Slate 12.
That was when command finally spoke again—but not the tower.
A secure channel. One she hadn’t heard in years.
“Mara Ellison,” the voice said, “you should not have returned to Slate Ridge.”
She recognized it instantly—Colonel Rylan Voss, the officer who had grounded her months earlier.
“What the hell just happened, Rylan? Someone tried to kill me.”
“That depends,” Voss answered calmly. “Did you see anything you weren’t supposed to?”
Her blood ran cold.
“This wasn’t an authorized operation,” he continued. “Bravo Echo 7 stumbled onto something classified. Your interference complicates matters.”
Mara’s grip tightened on the controls.
“What did they find?”
Static filled the line. Then:
“When you land, you will not speak to anyone. You will be escorted to debrief by Security Division.”
Her instruments flickered again—she had lost power in one engine. The A-10 limped toward the horizon.
When she finally touched down on base, emergency crews rushed toward the battered Warthog—but no cheers, no applause. Only stern faces and military police waiting beside a black unmarked vehicle.
Two officers approached her.
“Lieutenant Colonel Ellison, step out of the aircraft. You are under investigation for breach of protocol, unauthorized combat engagement, and destruction of classified equipment.”
She stared at them. “Classified equipment? I destroyed enemy launchers.”
One officer exchanged a loaded glance with the other.
“Ma’am… that missile wasn’t enemy-made.”
Before she could respond, Colonel Voss himself appeared.
“Specter 5,” he said softly, “you’re coming with us.”
But as they escorted her away, a figure watched from across the tarmac—a woman in a gray covert-operations uniform with no name tag. She gave Mara the slightest nod, as if signaling that the story was far from over.
Later that night, Mara was transferred to a classified unit known only by its codename:
Glassfield Division.
And the unanswered question burned in her mind:
What had Bravo Echo 7 seen deep inside Slate 12 that the military was desperate to bury?
PART 3 — The Secret Buried in Slate Ridge
Glassfield Division’s interrogation chamber was nothing like the standard military rooms Mara was used to. This one was sterile, silent, and built far underground. No clocks. No windows. Only a table, two chairs, and a camera that blinked once every thirty seconds, like a heart monitor.
Colonel Voss sat across from her.
“Your heroics today will cause problems,” he began. “Operational problems.”
“You mean ethical problems?” Mara shot back. “Why did someone inside our own command fire on me?”
Voss remained emotionless. “You entered restricted airspace and disrupted a black-level intelligence operation. Nothing more.”
But Mara saw it—the flicker of unease behind his eyes. They weren’t just covering up a mistake. They were hiding something enormous.
When she refused to answer further questions, the door opened and the unnamed woman from the tarmac stepped inside. She dismissed Voss with a gesture. He obeyed reluctantly.
“My name is Director Elena Stroud,” she said. “I lead Glassfield Division. And I know you didn’t come here today to die—you came to save people. That’s useful to me.”
Mara didn’t respond.
Stroud placed a dossier on the table. Inside were satellite images of Slate 12—specifically, a cave system sealed from aerial view.
“Bravo Echo 7 wasn’t ambushed by insurgents,” Stroud continued. “They discovered a crash site. Not foreign. Ours. An asset we lost eighteen months ago.”
“A drone?” Mara asked.
“A drone carrying classified weapons telemetry. If recovered by hostile forces, it would compromise every aircraft we deploy.”
Mara leaned back. “So command tried to erase the evidence—even if it meant sacrificing the SEAL team.”
Stroud didn’t deny it.
“Mara Ellison,” she said, “you showed today that you’re willing to die for people who don’t even know your name. I need pilots like that. Join Glassfield. The alternative is… less pleasant.”
Mara understood. This wasn’t a request.
But she had one final question:
“Who ordered the missile launched at me?”
Stroud closed the file. “That answer depends on whether you accept the position.”
A choice.
A threat.
A future painted in shadows.
Mara stared at the table, replaying every explosion, every scream, every second in Slate 12. She knew that joining Stroud would mean operating in secrecy, never receiving public honor, never clearing her name. But it also meant protecting people who would never know how close they came to dying.
And that, she realized, was what flying had always been about.
“I’ll join,” Mara said quietly. “But on one condition—if I uncover the truth behind Slate 12, I will not stay silent.”
Stroud gave a slight smirk.
“I wouldn’t recruit you if you would.”
That night, Mara received a new uniform, new credentials, and a new call sign:
Specter Actual.
She walked down the dim hallway toward her assigned quarters, hearing the distant hum of covert operations unfolding behind sealed doors. Slate Ridge was behind her now—but its secrets were not.
Somewhere out there, someone in her own chain of command had tried to kill her.
And Specter Actual was going to find out who.
What would you have done in Mara’s place—follow orders or risk everything to save lives? Tell me your call right now!