They called her a trainee until the canyon went dark and the radio whispered one name every SEAL in the room feared: Desert Serpent.-iwachan

Lawson had ninety seconds, and the woman on the cliff had just told him so.

The canyon answered with machine-gun fire.

Concrete dust burst over his shoulder. A shard sliced across his cheek. He did not move until Hayes grabbed his vest and dragged him lower.

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Across the courtyard, Miller was bleeding behind a smashed fuel pump.

His rifle lay beside him, useless under his twisted arm. His face had lost all the easy arrogance it carried at Firebase Zulu.

He was staring up at the cliff.

Not with anger. Not even fear.

With shame.

Knox fired again.

A fighter sprinting toward the service tunnel collapsed so suddenly his weapon skidded farther than his body.

The informant screamed somewhere inside the refinery office.

Lawson keyed his radio.

— Alpha, move on my mark. Hayes, smoke the left lane. Brooks, Foster, get to that office door.

Hayes looked at him through grit and blood.

— Sir, we cross that yard, we lose two men.

Another shot from above.

The second spotlight exploded, showering sparks across the rusted crane.

Half the courtyard vanished into shadow.

Knox’s voice came through again.

— Left lane is open for twelve seconds.

Lawson did not question her this time.

— Move.

Hayes threw smoke. Brooks and Foster lunged forward under its gray cover. Lawson moved with them, boots sliding on broken glass and concrete powder.

Every step felt borrowed.

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