My grandpa was a very frugal man. After he died, I found a war medal he had earned. I was planning to keep it, but decided to wear it once. That’s when my life changed forever.
Colonel: That’s a distinguished medal! Where did you get it??
Me: Um… It was my grandpa’s…
The colonel’s eyes narrow, and he takes a small step closer. He’s tall, imposing, the kind of man who commands attention even in civilian clothes. We’re both standing in line at the coffee cart near the park, but the way he’s staring at the medal on my chest makes the world narrow to just us two.
“That’s not just any medal,” he says, his voice low, intense. “That’s the Cross of Valor. Only a handful of men ever earned that. Your grandpa… what was his name?”
I hesitate. “Arthur Brennan.”
The colonel’s expression shifts—subtly, but I catch it. Recognition. Shock, maybe even fear. He glances around as if checking for eavesdroppers, then motions me away from the line.
“Walk with me,” he says, not really a request.
I follow him, confused but curious. We move along the gravel path under the oak trees, my sneakers crunching with each step. I finger the medal hanging around my neck, suddenly self-conscious about wearing it out in public. I only put it on this morning because I missed Grandpa. It felt like a quiet way to remember him. But now…
“He saved my life,” the colonel says abruptly, his voice distant, like he’s watching a memory unfold in front of him. “In ‘73. Northern border. He dragged me out of a minefield, took a hit himself doing it. Refused treatment until I was safe. I never saw him again after that.”
My breath catches. Grandpa never talked about the war. Not really. He mentioned “the desert” once or twice. Sometimes I’d hear him yelling in his sleep. But this? A minefield? Saving people? None of it ever made it into his stories.
“You sure you’re his grandson?” the colonel asks, turning to look at me.
I nod. “Yeah. He raised me. After my parents died.”
The colonel looks at me for a long second, then stops walking. “You need to come with me.”
“What? Where?”
He pulls a small leather wallet from his coat, flashes a badge. Not police. Military intelligence. The real kind. The kind you don’t see on TV.
“I can’t explain it here,” he says. “But that medal—you shouldn’t be wearing it. Not unless you’re ready.”
“Ready for what?” I ask, heart pounding.
He gives me a look that chills me to the bone. “To finish what your grandfather started.”
I want to laugh. I want to say this is insane. But something in me—the part that always felt Grandpa had secrets, the part that never quite believed he was just a quiet old man who liked gardening—starts to hum with energy.
I follow him.
We leave the park, and he guides me into a black SUV parked a block away. The windows are tinted, the driver silent. We drive in tense silence for fifteen minutes, until we reach an unmarked building on the edge of town, squat and gray and humming with security cameras. We’re buzzed in, then ushered down a corridor to a secure elevator. As the doors slide shut, the colonel finally speaks again.
“You ever hear of Project Shepherd?”
I shake my head.
“Well,” he says, folding his arms. “You’re about to.”
The elevator opens into a long underground hallway. The air smells sterile, metallic. We pass guards who nod to the colonel and glance at me with vague suspicion. At the end of the hall is a steel door. He punches in a code. It clicks open.
Inside is a room filled with old photographs, maps with pins, dusty file boxes—and at the center, a glass case. Empty. The colonel walks straight to it.
“That’s where your grandfather’s medal belonged,” he says. “We lost track of it the day he disappeared. Until today.”
I blink. “Disappeared? He died in his sleep last week.”
He turns sharply. “No, he didn’t. That wasn’t your grandfather.”
My skin goes cold. “What are you talking about?”
“The man who raised you may have been Arthur Brennan—but if he died last week, it wasn’t natural. And it wasn’t time.”
He opens one of the dusty files and tosses a folder onto the table in front of me. Inside is a black-and-white photo of my grandpa—much younger, but unmistakable—standing beside the colonel and several others in desert fatigues. On the back is a date: May 18, 1973. The same day Grandpa always avoided talking about.
“He was part of an elite recovery unit,” the colonel says. “Not just war missions—containment. Retrieval. Artifacts. Things that didn’t belong in the hands of governments or criminals.”
“What kind of things?”
He points to the medal. “That’s not just a decoration. It’s a key.”
I stare at it. It looks like any old war medal—bronze, engraved, scratched around the edges from years of handling.
“You’re telling me this… this opens something?”
He nods. “And not just a door.”
The colonel pulls out a second file and places it on the table. It contains schematics, strange inscriptions, and a single word at the top: Thresher.
“That’s what your grandfather died protecting. An object recovered in 1973. It’s been silent for decades. But yesterday… we picked up a signal. From his house.”
I step back. “Wait—are you saying this thing is active again?”
He meets my eyes. “And it wants you.”
I should leave. I should walk out of here and call someone, anyone. But a strange compulsion grips me, something old and deep and maybe not entirely mine. My hand drifts to the medal. It’s warm now. Warmer than it should be.
“What do I have to do?” I whisper.
“Put the medal in the case.”
I approach the empty glass display. There’s a small indentation at its center. Hesitantly, I remove the medal from my neck and press it into the slot.
The lights in the room flicker.
The floor vibrates under our feet.
The glass case glows, then begins to rise, revealing a hidden shaft beneath it. A spiral staircase descends into blackness.
The colonel draws a flashlight. “You sure you want to do this?”
“No,” I say honestly. “But I have to.”
We descend together.
The air grows colder as we spiral downward, the walls lined with strange carvings that pulse faintly with light. The colonel shines his flashlight over them, his mouth tight.
“These weren’t here the last time I came down,” he mutters.
We reach the bottom. A massive circular chamber stretches out before us. In the center is a stone pedestal—and hovering above it, suspended in a beam of light, is a small cube, no larger than a baseball, etched with symbols that seem to shimmer and move.
“That’s Thresher,” he says. “And it’s awake.”
The moment I step into the room, the cube pulses once—then slowly descends into my waiting hands. I don’t remember moving, but I’m standing at the pedestal now, arms outstretched. The moment it touches my skin, something clicks in my mind. Like doors swinging open.
I remember.
My grandfather’s voice, instructing me as a child, stories disguised as bedtime tales—parables, clues, codes. They were never just stories. They were training.
“Your bloodline is bonded to it,” the colonel says in awe. “It chose your grandfather, and now it’s choosing you.”
“What does it do?” I ask.
His answer is grim. “It reveals. Anything hidden—truths, lies, secrets. It doesn’t just show you. It makes you feel them. If there’s something in the world that needs to be found… it will lead you.”
“And what if someone dangerous gets it?”
“They can’t,” he says. “Only the bonded can wield it.”
I look down at the cube, now warm in my palms. My fingers tighten around it. “Then I need to protect it.”
A loud bang echoes from above.
We freeze.
“They found us,” the colonel hisses. “Move!”
We rush back up the spiral stairs. The lights flicker as shouts echo through the corridor above. As we reach the top, three men in black tactical gear burst through the entrance, weapons raised.
“DOWN!” one yells.
Before I can react, the cube pulses again. A blast of invisible force knocks them backward like rag dolls. The colonel grabs my arm, pulling me through a side door.
We sprint through narrow passageways until we reach a maintenance exit. We burst into the cold night, breathless. Sirens howl in the distance.
The colonel looks at me, breath ragged. “You just activated something ancient. There will be more of them. They won’t stop.”
I hold the cube against my chest. “Then we don’t stop either.”
He nods slowly. “There’s a safehouse two hours from here. We regroup, plan, figure out what Thresher wants to show you. After that…”
“We find out what Grandpa died for.”
As we disappear into the shadows, I glance down at the cube. Its glow softens. For the first time, I feel like I understand who my grandfather really was—and who I was always meant to be.
And I know this: my life will never be the same again.





