The screen didn’t show flight data. It showed a live video feed… from inside his own house…
His wife was on the screen, holding their toddler son in one arm and reaching for the thermostat with the other. The timestamp was live. Real-time. Brettโs eyes dart wildly.
โWhat did you do?โ he snarls.
โI reprogrammed the chopperโs long-range thermal cam,โ I say calmly, folding my arms. โItโs no longer scanning terrain. Itโs broadcasting your homeโs interior. From a drone stationed less than fifty feet from your porch.โ
โYouโre bluffing,โ he mutters, but his voice cracks. Sweat gathers on his forehead.
I raise an eyebrow and tap a button on my watch. The screen flickers. The thermal view switches to full color. Thereโs his family. Safeโฆ for now.
He lunges forward, trying to rip the cable out of the monitor, but I step between him and the console, arm extended like a barrier. โDonโt,โ I warn. โI didnโt come here for your family. Theyโre innocent. Unlike you.โ
โYou have no idea what you’re messing with,โ he growls.
โI know exactly what Iโm messing with,โ I snap. โFive years ago, you rerouted our coordinates to an unverified LZ. Promised it was safe. We dropped into a slaughter.โ
He flinches. โI was under ordersโโ
โFrom who?โ I demand. โWho told you to sell out Talon?โ
Brett doesnโt answer. Instead, he darts to the side and makes a run for the hangarโs side door. But itโs sealed tight. The red light above the frame glows like a siren. No exit.
He turns, panting, cornered now, his eyes darting between me and the Apache behind me.
โYou canโt prove anything,โ he spits. โNo court will believe you. I was given intel, I acted on itโโ
โI decrypted your flight logs,โ I say, pulling a second folder from my inside pocket and tossing it on the floor. The pages fan outโcopies of encrypted orders, reauthorization stamps, comm logs. โYour coordinates didnโt come from Command. They came from a private sat channel traced back to Lockridge Defense. You were on their payroll the entire time.โ
He stares at the papers like theyโre radioactive.
โI didn’t know theyโd all die,โ he whispers.
โMaybe not,โ I say. โBut you knew thereโd be an ambush. You knew weโd walk into hell.โ
He doesnโt respond. His silence is the loudest confession.
I take a slow step forward. โSeventeen of my brothers and sisters burned alive in that canyon. You sat back in a bird two klicks out, claiming comms failure. I watched you circle overhead while we screamed for backup.โ
His lips tremble. He finally lowers his gaze. โThey said theyโd make it quick. Just a scare. I didnโt knowโโ
โThey lied to you, Brett,โ I interrupt. โAnd you believed them because they offered you more than a government paycheck.โ
He drops to his knees, hands raised in surrender. โWhat do you want from me?โ
โI want the truth on record,โ I say. โI want your voice saying everything. You, admitting it. Not for me. For Talon. For the families who never got answers.โ
He shakes his head. โIโll go to prisonโโ
โYouโll get justice,โ I say. โThatโs more than the rest of us got.โ
I pull a small recorder from my pocket and set it on the floor in front of him.
Brett hesitates, then reaches forward with trembling fingers and presses the button. His voice is small, but clear.
โMy name is Major Brett Halvorsen,โ he begins, eyes locked on the blinking red light. โFive years ago, I rerouted Operation Talon to a compromised drop site. I was approached by a third-party defense contractorโLockridge Defenseโwho offered me payment in exchange for strategic positioning of assets. I was told it was a drill. A scare. I didnโt confirm with Command. I relayed the orders anyway. I betrayed my unit.โ
I close my eyes. The words donโt heal the scar, but they settle something deep inside me.
When he finishes, I walk to the console and open a secure line to Command. โThis is Colonel Locke, authorization Echo-Tango-73. Priority redline. Transmitting audio now.โ
The line goes silent for a moment, then a crisp voice replies: โAcknowledged, Colonel. Package received. Stand by for ground security.โ
โETA?โ I ask.
โThree minutes. Hang tight.โ
I turn back to Brett. โThatโs the sound of the walls closing in.โ
He sinks fully to the floor, face in his hands.
The moment stretches long. The hangar is silent except for the soft hum of the Apacheโs idle systems and the occasional mechanical click from the heating ducts above.
I glance at the monitor. His wife is still on screen. Sheโs making a snack for the boy. Theyโre safe. Blissfully unaware of the storm about to hit.
I walk over and switch the feed off. Give them their privacy back.
Three minutes later, the hangar doors hiss open. Six MPs in tactical gear file in, weapons holstered, eyes scanning.
I nod toward Brett. โHeโs all yours. Charges include treason, conspiracy, and dereliction of duty.โ
They cuff him without a word. He doesnโt resist. He just keeps whispering, โI didnโt know,โ over and over like a broken machine.
As they haul him away, Command patches back through. โColonel Locke, your testimony has been reviewed. Effective immediately, your reinstatement is confirmed. Command requests your presence for a full debrief.โ
I pause. โIโve got one last thing to do.โ
I walk over to my locker and pull out a dusty duffel bag I havenโt touched in years. Inside is my original Talon flight suit. Still patched. Still bloodstained.
I change into it slowly. With reverence.
When I emerge, the MPs give me a nod. One of them speaks, voice almost reverent. โYouโre one of them, arenโt you? From the canyon?โ
I meet his gaze. โOne of the last.โ
He swallows. โItโs an honor, maโam.โ
I give a tight nod and walk past them, straight toward the Apache.
I climb in, flipping switches like muscle memory. The bird hums to life beneath me. The cockpit feels like home.
โBase Sentinel, this is Talon One,โ I say over comms. โCleared for flight?โ
โAffirmative, Talon One,โ comes the reply. โWelcome back.โ
The rotors spin faster. Wind kicks up around the hangar. As the chopper lifts into the air, I donโt look back.
Because the ghosts of Talon arenโt behind me anymore.
Theyโre flying with me.
And this time, Iโm not just Marina the mechanic.
Iโm Colonel Locke.
And Iโm taking back the sky.




