They Treated Her Like a Mere Cadet – Until a Marine Stood Up and Commanded, “Iron Wolf, Stand By.”
Protocol Reactivated
That night while most cadets crowded into the mess hall, the strategy hall was set up for a briefing. Rows of recruits filled the room, chatter low and restless.
Lieutenant Harlon sat near the front, legs crossed, a grin already playing on his lips. Then just as the lights dimmed, the overhead projector froze.
A low chime echoed through the hall. A new notification flashed across the instructor’s console: restricted access login authorization code wolf01.
A hush rippled through the room. The instructor frowned, confused, tapping a few keys to override, but the system wouldn’t respond.
Then Ava’s tablet resting on the desk in front of her vibrated once. She glanced down. One message, no subject, no sender, just four words on the glowing screen.
“Iron Wolf standby”
Her fingers froze above the display, her heartbeat surged. Across the aisle, Laya caught the brief flash of text.
Her eyes widened, lips parting slightly as realization crawled over her expression: Iron Wolf. She didn’t know what it meant, not exactly, but she knew one thing: whatever this was, Ava Mercer wasn’t just another cadet, and someone somewhere had just called her back.
Hours later, long after lights out, Ava sat cross-legged on her bunk in silence. Her notebook lay open across her knees, pages filled with handwritten coordinates, timestamps, and patterns, the kind of details no one else seemed to notice.
She flipped to the newest entry, her pen hovering above the paper, tracing the words she’d just written: wolf01 authorization active. She closed the notebook softly, slid it beneath her pillow, and leaned back against the wall.
Outside, a cold wind pressed against the windows, rattling the blinds softly against the glass. Somewhere deep inside the facility, encrypted servers processed the override request, sending automated alerts to systems far above Fort Concincaid’s clearance level.
Miles away in a classified operations center, a man in a sharply pressed uniform leaned over a glowing console as the alert lit his screen. Colonel Marcus Hail.
He froze, jaw tightening, fingers curling slowly into a fist. The words on his monitor pulsed once before fading into secure encryption.
“Iron wolf protocol reactivated”
For a long moment he said nothing. Then softly, almost to himself, he spoke the name like an oath carried on old memories.
“Iron Wolf activated”
And with that he stood, grabbed his cap, and walked out of the room without hesitation. When that call sign resurfaced, it meant only one thing: someone at Fort Concincaid had no idea who they were mocking, but they were about to find out.
The message had been sent, the protocols had been triggered, and somewhere deep in the silence of night, wheels began turning that no one at Fort Concincaid even knew existed.
