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My family left no chair for me at my brother’s welcome-home dinner. Dad raised his glass and said, “Some people are born to command.” He never looked at me. To them, I was the daughter who quit military academy and disappeared. So I stayed quiet. Until the next morning, a drill sergeant saw me on my brother’s training base, snapped into a salute, and said one word that made his rifle hit the dirt: “General.”

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That was when I understood.

The trap was not meant to make me run.

It was meant to make me trust the uniform coming to rescue us.

One of the MPs suddenly turned his rifle toward Price.

I moved before the betrayal finished forming.

Dust. Gunfire. Shouting. Concrete chips flying.

I dragged Noah behind cover and sprinted toward my car. The ringed man was reaching for the field unit.

We hit each other hard.

He fought well. Too well.

The unit skidded across the gravel.

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