The General Barked an Odd Command No One Could Understand – Until the Cleaning Lady Snapped to Attention.
Her fingers tapped the side of her neck.
“No implant?” Stratton said.
“Not anymore,” Cassia replied. “But the trace signature, they buried it in my medical metadata. When Centravex scans vitals, it wakes the tag. It’s buried under non-critical diagnostics, not even flagged as priority code.”
Stratton stepped back like he’d been struck.
“That’s surgical.”
Cassia’s eyes hardened: “Failsafe wasn’t just a task force, it was a sandbox. We were the test.”
Silence settled again. Outside the base was still technically functional. No one had sounded alarms, no sirens, no intercoms. But the people who knew how the system felt, who had served long enough to sense shifts in command tone, were already changing posture.
In the motor pool a mechanic quietly locked a weapons crate. In mess a comm’s officer stopped mid-bite and looked up like someone had whispered in her ear. In the security sublevel two guards who’d served in the Helmand campaign sat very, very still as the name Raven09 flickered once across an archive terminal.
Inside Hall Omega Stratton’s voice dropped to a whisper: “If you’re still being tracked, someone’s expecting you to act.”
Cassia turned to the door: “Then we don’t disappoint them.”
Stratton’s eyes narrowed: “What’s the next move?”
“We draw them in.” She stepped toward the console, fingers flying across the outdated manual keypad.
A loading bar appeared. Unauthorized, untethered, unwelcome. Centravex resisted for a second, then allowed access. Cassia selected a comm’s burst packet. Not a message, not a trace, a ping. One that would only be recognized by systems still running legacy Raven firmware.
“Someone’s going to answer that,” Stratton said.
Cassia nodded: “That’s the point.”
The ping took exactly 4 minutes and 22 seconds to reach its destination, somewhere beyond Centravex’s grid. Embedded in a dormant tactical node thought to be decommissioned, a flicker of life blinked once, then held. It didn’t reply. It didn’t trace back. But it received. And that alone was enough.
Cassia stepped back from the console as the status light faded.
“That’s the line crossed,” she said.
Stratton stared at the dark screen: “You just woke something that’s been asleep for over a decade.”
“No,” Cassia replied. “I just reminded it I’m still alive.”
They both knew what came next. 15 minutes later Black Ridge Base was no longer on internal routine. Without fanfare, without sirens, Stratton issued an internal classification shift: omega shadow protocol. It wasn’t public. It wasn’t even visible to most staff.
But the effect was immediate. Sections locked down, hallways rerouted, system access tiered by isolation tears. Anyone watching might have thought it was just a drill. It wasn’t.
Cassia didn’t leave Hall Omega. She changed into a dark field jacket Stratton retrieved from a locked container, something she’d once worn in places no cameras were allowed. Her tank top was still underneath, her boots the same. But her posture had shifted fully now. Not a cleaner, not a ghost, a weapon.
And that shift hadn’t gone unnoticed. Captain Ashford, who had lingered in the shadows after the last briefing, stepped forward carefully. He hadn’t left with the others. He’d stayed behind, silent, hidden in the far corridor outside the blast doors. Now watching Stratton and Cassia exchange data over the dark terminal, he finally spoke.
“She’s Ravenus 9.”
Cassia turned slowly. Stratton’s jaw clenched.
“You were eavesdropping.”
Ashford raised his hands: “Calm. Listening. There’s a difference.”
Cassia took a step toward him: “And now you know.”
Ashford didn’t flinch: “I served in Helmand, 2009. I was on the extraction list, the one that never came.”
Stratton and Cassia exchanged a glance.
Ashford continued: “There was a name on that roster. Redacted escorted asset, high sensitivity. They never told us who we were there for, only that she had information no one else could access.”
His eyes fixed on her: “You were the asset.”
Cassia didn’t deny it. Ashford let out a low whistle: “So why are you here? Why now?”
“Because the people who buried my team,” she said, “didn’t bury me deep enough.”
Ashford nodded slowly: “So what do you need?”
Stratton stepped in: “No, you’re not involved.”
Ashford held up a palm: “With all due respect, sir, I’ve been following this ghost trail for 12 years. I have off-grid surveillance archives, intercept fragments and ping anomalies that no one would authorize me to investigate.”
Cassia raised an eyebrow: “Do you have clearance into sub channel 7 bravo?”
Ashford smirked: “That and a few things Centravex forgot to clean up.”
Stratton cursed under his breath: “Fine. You’re in. But if you breathe this outside this room, I will make sure your record disappears faster than hers did.”
Ashford nodded: “Understood.”
Cassia turned back to the console: “Good. Then help me find where they’re listening from.”
Ashford took her place at the terminal and began typing.
“If the node you pinged reactivated a shadow process, there’ll be a bleed trace. Microseconds, barely visible, but it’ll glow on thermal.”
He pulled up the overlay. The screen bloomed with a radial map. Most of it dark but one sliver, far west, deep in the training compound’s decommissioned sector, glowed faint orange.
“Gotcha,” Ashford said. “There’s a live relay bouncing through that wing, sector 12. Supposed to be gutted for renovation. No traffic for 3 years.”
Stratton narrowed his eyes: “Until now.”
Cassia’s voice dropped: “Then someone’s in there listening.”
Stratton tapped a panel on the wall and a compartment hissed open to reveal a sidearm and a compact comm’s kit. He handed the gun to Cassia without hesitation. She took it like it had never left her hand.
“I thought you didn’t believe in weapons on base,” she said.
“I don’t,” Stratton replied. “But I believe in old ghosts carrying unfinished business.”
Cassia checked the chamber, locked the slide: “Then let’s see who’s brave enough to wake the dead.”
They exited Hall Omega through the maintenance corridor, unwatched, unlit and deliberately untraceable. Ashford led from behind, watching their flank. Stratton moved like he hadn’t in years. But it was Cassia who dictated their pace. She didn’t ask where Sector 12 was. She didn’t need to. Her memory of the base was surgical.
As they neared the sealed off sector the air changed. Less filtered, older layers of dust clung to the walls and the lights overhead flickered with low voltage. Most people assumed this wing had been stripped for parts. That was the cover story: equipment salvaging.
The truth was stranger.
Stratton whispered: “This area was shut down after Vex one failed its first live scenario. The data was too unstable. The neural net couldn’t adapt to friendly fire contingencies.”
Cassia’s eyes narrowed: “I remember. Raven was deployed to shut it down.”
Ashford looked around: “So this is where it started.”
Cassia stopped in front of a door marked sublevel access. She ran her fingers over the edge of the control panel, found a groove hidden beneath chipped paint and pressed. A low click, then silence. The door slid open.
Inside, darkness. Then movement. A flicker of light. A humming server stack. Screens that should have been powered down began to glow, slow and soft, like eyes opening after sleep.
They stepped in. On the far wall one terminal pulsed a blue signature. Ashford rushed to it, fingers flying across keys.
“This isn’t just a relay,” he said. “This is an uplink. Someone’s mirroring Vex protocol packages through here.”
Stratton leaned in: “Meaning?”
“Meaning Centravex is blind to this node and someone’s using it to see everything without being seen.”
Cassia moved toward the server tower. Her fingers brushed the casing, then froze. There engraved along the spine was a symbol. A triangle inside it a stylized raven with wings folded. Below it, Kilo Echo Strike read.
Her breath caught: “That’s my team,” she said quietly. “That was our off the books call sign,” Stratton muttered. “So someone rebuilt your command relay without authorization.”
Cassia turned to Ashford: “Check for outbound traffic. I want to know where this ghost node is reporting to.”
Ashford typed furiously, then stopped: “Uh, that can’t be right.”
“What?” Stratton snapped.
Ashford pointed: “It’s not reporting out. It’s reporting in.”
The room went still.
“In from where?” Cassia asked.
Ashford’s face had gone pale. Coordinates traced back to an offline vault, one not connected to Centravex, deep cold.
“And the signal signature,” he tapped a file.
A profile, blurred, incomplete but visible. The file read: “Operator Ident: Raven08. Status: deceased. Response: active. Last signal: 2 hours ago.”
Cassia staggered back a step.
“Raven08 was killed in Ivory Fire,” she whispered.
Stratton looked at her: “Are you sure?”
She nodded: “I saw the blast myself. She was 5 feet away.”
Ashford whispered: “Then who’s using her ID now?”
The screen pulsed once more and then with no warning the lights in the room snapped off. All screens went black. Behind them a soft metallic click echoed in the dark. Someone else was already in the room.
The moment the metallic click echoed through the dark, Cassia had dropped to a crouch, sidearm drawn, eyes already scanning for the angle of approach. Stratton took two steps back, one hand reaching for the emergency panel near the wall, the other subtly drawing a concealed blade from his belt. A habit from older wars, when silence killed cleaner than bullets.
Ashford froze, caught halfway between the terminal and the blackness behind him. No words came from the shadowed figure beyond the threshold, no sound of boots. Just the slow, deliberate inhale of someone who knew they weren’t the ones being hunted.
Cassia didn’t move. She waited. Then the power surged back on, but only to one thing. The terminal behind Ashford. Its screen glowed dim blue. A single line of code flickered across: “Welcome back, Nine.”
Cassia’s eyes narrowed.
“This is a trap,” Ashford whispered. “Whoever’s in that hallway triggered a manual blackout, probably keyed to the motion sensors.”
Stratton’s voice was calm but cold: “They didn’t come to stop us, they came to watch.”
Cassia stepped toward the corridor slowly, gun up, feet whispering across concrete. You wanted to know who survived Raven. She turned the corner fast, low, clearing the angle.
Nothing. Just an empty hall. Except not quite. On the far wall someone had smeared a crude drawing into the dust. A single raven, upside down, its wings clipped, its eye crossed out in red.
Cassia’s blood ran cold. Stratton joined her. He took one look and swore under his breath.
“That’s a message,” Ashford peeking over their shoulders said. “A threat.”
Cassia shook her head: “A signal. The last one we used before blackout extraction. It meant one of ours turned.”
She walked slowly back into the server room, suddenly colder, more mechanical. Ashford turned to Stratton: “So what do we do?”
“We hunt,” Cassia said. “But we don’t do it loud.”
Stratton nodded: “I’ll coordinate lockdown with command tier. Quiet internal ops only. If we rattle Centravex, this thing buries itself deeper.”
Ashford tapped into the terminal again.
“The signature that woke the vault, Raven08, it bounced through six nodes before it landed here. All internal, all base level assets. Someone’s got physical access.”
Cassia asked: “Can we isolate who touched the system physically in the last 6 hours?”
“Not easily,” Ashford replied. “Centravex logs movements by rank, not individual input at this level.”
“But,” he leaned in, typed.
A slow grin spread across his face.
“But the biometric sub layer tracks heartbeat variance when terminal override is used. It’s a leftover stress indicator from old threat detection software.”
Stratton raised an eyebrow. And Ashford brought up a graph.
“We filter by high spike patterns, high stress during override, and we find one here,” he zoomed in. “User C417B, alias Lieutenant Marcus Bell.”
Cassia’s eyes hardened. Stratton’s voice dropped as steel: “He triggered the ghost relay?”
