Elite Rescue Team Discovers Their Commander Sold Them Out-congtien

The Special Forces Unit Betrayed from Within

At 01:32 a.m., the desert air felt cold enough to crack skin.

The wind carried dust through the temporary staging camp in long gray sheets while generators rattled behind rows of armored vehicles.

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Men moved quietly around crates of ammunition and communications equipment, checking weapons beneath floodlights that turned everything pale and exhausted.

Nobody joked before missions anymore.

Not after Nigeria.

I sat on the rear ramp of the transport helicopter tightening the straps on my vest while Sergeant Luis Torres smoked half a cigarette beside the landing gear.

The smell of diesel fuel mixed with burned tobacco and cold metal.

“You ever get the feeling a mission already went bad before it starts?” Torres asked.

I looked up.

Torres had been with the unit almost as long as I had.

Eight years.

Three continents.

Too many funerals.

He trusted instinct more than intelligence reports because instinct had saved him more times than command structures ever did.

“You seeing something?” I asked.

“No,” he said.

Then he flicked ash into the dirt.

“That’s the problem.”

At 01:47 a.m., Colonel Marcus Hale arrived at the briefing tent carrying a sealed operations folder stamped with Blackridge Command authorization markings.

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